The past few weeks have been challenging and sad for me. I’ve lost my dear mum after a year of courageous fighting against a very harsh diagnosis. I’ve been trying to work on myself to arrive more prepared for the inevitable moment. The key for me has definitely been to turn this event into an opportunity to grow my ability to self-care, self-compassion, and self-acceptance. There is so much power in these life-changing practices, and I’m sure you would all benefit from reflecting and experimenting with bringing more of it into your life too.
A mistake I struggle with is confusing self-esteem with self-compassion, and the work of Professor Kristin Neff has really helped me to clarify this interesting topic.
It is a common belief that it is good to have a balanced level of self-esteem, that involves a positive evaluation of ourselves. It’s also true though that it very easy to move into dangerous territory when it becomes too low or too high.
The concept of self-esteem has a couple of big limitations, particularly dangerous for the ones who tend to have a hyper achiever or perfectionist streak.
1- Self-esteem fails when it involves a judgment about ourselves: are we good enough, fast enough, rich enough, and so on? The pitfall is that in order to make a judgment you have to inevitably compare yourself to others, often bringing them down, in order to bring yourself up or vice versa, depending on your personality. It’s really about how you stand out among others. This creates separation, arrogance, and often prejudice.
2- Self-esteem fails completely when we fail. If we cannot succeed at something, we start noticing that there is something fundamentally wrong with ourselves. When we don’t succeed in something, when something out of our control happens to us, the ego response is to activate our threat defense system: we attack ourselves with harsh self-criticism, so that we become at the same time the attacker and the attacked. This mindset leads us to a sense of abnormality and makes everything worse by activating negative thought patterns connected with victimism and blame.
Here is when it’s time to call in the power of self-compassion. Self-compassion is not judging ourselves positively, but it’s relating to ourselves kindly. According to self-compassion expert Kristin Neff, there are three main elements to self-compassion:
Kindness: simply treating yourself as you would treat a friend. It seems so easy and natural, but very rarely we actually do that. Instead, we brutalise ourselves with mean words and beliefs and we play them on repeat in our heads.
Common humanity: being imperfect is really what connects us with others! Instead of separating our experience on this earth from the others, common humanity provides us with a bigger picture about how imperfection, failure and grief are common traits of being human. They might touch us to a different degree, at different times, but they are all part of our beautifully human life.
Presence in the moment: we often don’t even notice our suffering and self-criticism because we are so used to negative and damaging emotions and thoughts that they become normality. Mindfulness and validating what’s happening in the present moment allow to acknowledge that we are suffering so that we can give ourselves compassion. It can be painful to allow negative emotions to wash over us, but it passes and then we can move forward.
So these are the 3 tips I would love for you to experiment with:
Treat and talk to yourself as you would with your friend.
Widen your point of view to our common humanity and feel part of it instead of separate and alone.
Be aware of your emotions and thoughts. Remember those are not the sky, but just clouds that are meant to pass by and go.
Finally, by practicing self-compassion you are not being selfish, or complacent. Research from Kristin Neff shows that those who learn to be self-compassionate have less fear of failure and also find it easier to persevere. If we show ourselves kindness and unconditional love, we create a place of safety and strength from which we can pull ourselves up after a fall, sometimes take the more difficult choice, and ultimately commit to live a more fulfilled life.
You are a human being worthy of unconditional love, take responsibility for taking care of yourselves and see what difference it makes.
Please send this letter to anyone in your life that might be going through a tough and challenging time. This might really help them!
I’m always here for you,
Cristina