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A Self-Compassion Practice Can Be The Change You Need

Self-compassion can bring so much to our life. It can have many benefits such as increasing resilience, and protecting again perfectionism. 

Common Beliefs

I think there is a common belief that you will work harder and accomplish more if you are hard on yourself, but the research directly goes against that. For example, more self-compassion can make us more resilient and protects against developing mental health issues. We tend to go with the flow more and even when we have a failure, we have the ability to move ahead and not give up, so that we can achieve greater success. Generally speaking, those with more self-compassion levels tend to cope better during difficult times and take greater responsibility and our more accountable when a mistake is made instead blaming others. 

Kindness

What does self-compassion exactly mean? It has several components, the first is kindness. What does that mean? It means we should be kind to and take care of ourselves. We should talk to ourselves like we would talk to someone we care about.

Many people have a very critical and shaming self-talk voice, which does nothing to make us be better people. Instead, it causes us to feel unworthy and increases our perfectionism (I will talk about this more in another blog) in order to stay one step ahead of criticisms from others and ourselves.

The first step in creating more kindness is to develop our awareness so that when we notice that our self-talk is critical, we will question the accuracy of those thoughts and then reframe them by changing them or not accepting the inaccurate thoughts or beliefs. How does this look? The critical voice says you are such a failure, you can’t do anything right, after not getting the promotion you wanted. A kinder approach would be, we did really well and made it to the final two. We will do better next time. It is taking a gentler tone.

Common Humanity

The next part of self-compassion is recognizing that we all have a shared humanity. We all suffer, we all have losses, and we all make mistakes. It is the understanding that we are all human and sometimes we all come up short. It is what makes us human. We all have up and downs, it is a part of being human. We cannot always get what we want, and we cannot always be what we want to be either. It is the basic fact of life which we share with everyone else. It is a part of our human experience.

Mindfulness

The last component is mindfulness. So, what does that actually mean? It means that we are present with what is going on in the moment.  Good and bad things will happen to us. Like everything in life, nothing is permanent. Everything changes. We should not get overly attached to what we are feeling but be aware and acknowledge our feelings, whether we feel happy, angry, sad, or even overwhelmed. 

Our feelings in themselves are not good or bad. Feelings are just feelings, but we do not have to over identify with them, nor do we have to change what we perceived as negative to a positive emotion. I sometimes think with the push to positive thinking we feel we must numb or ignore what we are actually feeling. It can be difficult to sit with discomfort but if we do not let ourselves be swept away and try to push it way by numbing, we can acknowledge our pain and even comfort ourselves when needed.

In Conclusion

It is extremely important to have compassion for others, but we must also include ourselves in our compassion practice because we too are worthy of compassion. If we can adopt a self-compassion practice it will have many benefits. There are many different practices that will build our self-compassion.

You can learn more about self-compassion practices by going to https://self-compassion.org. This is Dr. Kristen Neff’s site which has a lot of exercises to help build self-compassion as well as other resources and links. She has written many books on subject. You can also go to her site and test your self-compassion levels.

References

Christopher Germer. The Mindful Path to Self-Compassion. (2009).
C. Germer & K Neff. Self-Compassion in a Clinical Setting. (2013).
Kristin D. Neff and Christopher Germer. The Mindful Self-Compassion Workbook. The Guilford Press.
Kristin D. Neff and Katie A. Dahm. Self-Compassion: What it is, what it does, and how it relates to mindfulness. University of Texas at Austin

Blog, “Empathy to Compassion”, https://illuminationcounselingservice.com/2022/04/02/empathy-to-compassion/

Blog, “What is the harm in being a perfectionist?”, https://illuminationcounselingservice.com/2021/07/25/what-is-the-harm-in-being-a-perfectionist/

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