Please share your experience and thoughts with me below. Thanks!What is the first thing you do when you realize you’ve made a mistake or let yourself down?
Maybe you said you would be somewhere for someone, and then forgot. Or, you want to lose weight, but you couldn’t resist that piece of chocolate cake before bed. Or maybe, you’re trying to reconcile a relationship, but the last time you got together you said something you regretted.
If you’re like most of us, you spend the next few minutes (or more) criticizing what you did wrong, telling yourself how bad you are, how you should have acted differently, feeling guilty and punishing yourself one way or another.
What is the impact on your self-esteem when you react this way?
Somehow we believe if we punish ourselves, it will make us a better person. Like beating yourself up will get you to do a better job the next time. But does that really work? Never.
In fact, when you spend your life feeling guilty, ashamed or humiliated inside, you are actually creating more circumstances to prove you are right. It actually lowers your self-esteem, so you feel less lovable.
When you feel less lovable, you push love away. If you want more nurturing and love in your life, you must nurture and love yourself.
What if, instead, it was your child or your puppy that had made the mistake? For example, if your daughter gave an incorrect answer aloud in school and the other kids laughed at her. When she walks in the door that afternoon, still in tears, are you going to tell her how stupid she was? Would you say, “Aren’t you ever going to get it together? You’ll never make friends that way!” Of course not … You would encourage her to believe in herself and try again!
So, why do we reach for the critical parent when it comes to our own learning? Where does that nurturing parent go when we need her for ourselves? Why do we save her for others, yet believe we deserve to be punished and shamed?
When you nurture yourself, you love yourself. When you love yourself, you have more love to give the world. When you give love into the world, the world loves you back.
The next time you make a “mistake” or discover you’ve done something you regret, try this:
* Recognize your immediate response and stop. This can be in the form of a thought, an emotion, a word or an action.
* Acknowledge the impact this is having on you. How do you feel?
* Make a choice – Instead of reaching for your inner critical parent and putting your self down, reach for that nurturing parent within and talk to yourself like you would talk to someone you care about.
* Forgive yourself. Instead of slapping your forehead and asking, “What was I thinking?” breathe and ask yourself the kinder question, “What am I learning?”
To make lasting change, you will have to “stay awake.” Beating yourself up and feeling guilty has probably become a habit. Just noticing is the powerful first step to change.
As you recognize, acknowledge, forgive and change, the world around you changes. Your world becomes a softer, friendlier, more forgiving and loving place.
Forgive and nurture yourself today. It’s a powerful step to finding more love in your life.
Please share your experience and thoughts with me below. Thanks!
Such wise words Cindy! I’m always so glad to read your articles because they really reach deeply and teach wisely.
Great article Cindy! Truly the only way to change our outer world is to change our inner world. One of my teachers used to say, “You can never allow another to love you more than you love yourself.”
Thank you for being a powerful ripple in the pond!
Sonia 😉
Self forgiveness is go important. In the transformation work of opening up to the truth of who we are we MUST forgive our self all things. Easily said and not so easily done. Thank you for this well-said article. The more self-forgiveness becomes a natural normal practice the better.
Thanks, Cindy – I’ve been working hard on being nicer to myself and this is another great tool for that toolbox!
Great article, Cindy! Learning how to observe our thoughts and reactions is so vital to making changes in our patterns. Roy Nelson (my husband and spiritual healer) always says “you can’t ever beat yourself into flying right”! Thanks for your gentle reminder, Cindy!
The faster I can forgive myself, the better I feel. What a great reminder to forgive oneself on a daily basis…it is so healing:)
Oh Cindy, this is SUCH a valuable article! I often ask clients to speak to themselves as they would a best friend. We can be so cruel to ourselves…. this is VERY important as our thoughts and language truly do create our world. Thank you for this lovely reminder, and the question: What am I learning? 😉