GLOBAL FAMILY 1ღ COLLABORATING and COCREATING a LOVING,PEACEFUL, JUST and SUSTAINABLE WORLD.
Showing posts with label Therese Borchard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Therese Borchard. Show all posts

8 Steps to Like Yourself (More)




by Therese Borchard -

Notice the word “like.” I’m not going to be so bold as to introduce eight steps that will have you love yourself. Baby steps, right?

For some, self-love is a no-brainer. They grew up in homes where LOVE was the predominant four-letter word. 

Some possess too much and like Vanity Smurf, are most comfortable with a mirror in hand. These are the loud talkers, who think that everyone 20 feet behind and ahead of them should hear what’s on their mind.

I have been working toward self-like for 25 years now and think I have about 25 more to go before I’m truly comfortable in my own skin. 

I have lots and lots of exercises I use to get me smiling in the mirror instead of growling, gleaned from the bookshelves of self-help books I’ve read over the years and the lessons I take away from therapy sessions. 

Here are a few of my favorites, some of the steps I’ve taken lately to like myself more. Maybe they will generate some amicable feelings in you, as well.



8 STEPS TO LIKE YOURSELF

1. Lower your expectations

It’s easy to hate yourself when you keep falling short of your expectations. Last summer, when I stepped away from my corporate job, I felt as though I should still be able to make at least two-thirds of that salary as a freelance writer crafting mental-health pieces. So I signed on to an unrealistic number of contracts, giving myself approximately 2.5 hours to complete each piece. 

If I were able to crank out two to three articles a day, I could meet my salary expectation.

Two things happened: my writing was horrible because I didn’t have time to do any research or give much thought to the pieces and I cried more than I wrote. A friend of mine saw the pressure I was putting on myself and begged me to quit one of my gigs (as a depression expert of all things) … to save my sanity. 

In the process of patching myself together again after my breakdown at that time, I realized that I needed to give myself realistic goals.

I tripled my time allowance for each piece, so now if I get one done in less than 7.5 hours, I walk away with a feeling of accomplishment rather than defeat. I held on to some hourly consulting work—where I can charge a higher rate–to make the numbers work.

2. Read your self-esteem file

My self-esteem file is a manila folder holding lots of warm fuzzies from friends, readers, teachers, and an occasional family member.

It was an assignment from my therapist about eight years ago. She wanted me to write a list of my key strengths. 

I sat down with the piece of paper, and all I could come up with was thick hair, strong fingernails, and a well-proportioned nose.

So she made me ask three of my best friends to list 10 characteristics they like about me. I wept when I read their lists and I stuck them into the folder that I labeled, “Self-Esteem File.” 

After that, any time anyone would compliment me on anything—“You’re a nice person, but we are firing you”–I’d write it down on a post-it (“nice person”), and stick it in there.

My therapist told me she would like me to graduate to a place where I don’t need a self-esteem file but I still don’t know how to generate the warm fuzzies myself, so I’m keeping it.

3. Talk to yourself as a friend

Every once in awhile, I’ll catch myself self-bashing and pose the question, “Is that what I would say to Libby, Mike, Beatriz or Michelle?” 

If I talked to them the way I talked to myself, the friendship would have ended years ago. No.

I tell Mike, “Go easy on yourself. You’re doing an amazing job!” I tell Beatriz, “You’re under a ton of stress, no wonder why a few things can’t be attended to right now.” I tell Libby to listen to her feelings, and Michelle that she is heroic.

4. Picture yourself

In one outpatient program I participated in for severe depression, we were instructed to visualize ourselves all better.

I pictured a very serene woman in a pink sundress holding a rose, which symbolized healing.

The expression in her eyes articulated true peace, as if nothing could shake her serenity. 

Later, in the mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) I took last month, we were asked to do the same.

Once again, I pictured this woman in pink who wasn’t worried about looking bloated or if she was going to be able to sleep that night or how to deal with the negative intrusive thought of the day. 

It was as if she was anchored in the moment and held a secret that would make all of my obsessions seem foolish. Sometimes on my run or during my meditations, I will go back to that image, and she brings me peace.

5. Discover yourself

In Anneli Rufus’ delightful book “Unworthy,” she lists ten hidden self-esteem booby traps and how to dismantle them.

One such trap, nonidentity, is fixed by figuring out who you are. 

“Your post-self-loathing self is not some total stranger,” she writes. “He or she is you, the true you, found again.” 

She then tells the story of a friend of hers who realized one day that all the clothes in her closet didn’t match her personality at all. So she donated most of her wardrobe to charity and started over.

This anecdote reminded me of the afternoon my not-yet husband told me we should help each other with our wardrobes.

“You go through all my clothes and put whatever shirts or pants you don’t like into this plastic bag,” he instructed me. “I’ll do the same with yours.”

An hour later, I had one shirt in the bag. He had nearly every article of clothing I owned inside his bag. Most of them were my mom’s. When she quit smoking, she gained 50 pounds and sent me all of her clothes. 

I was grateful because
a) I was cheap and hated to shop, and
b) I didn’t have enough self-esteem to think that I deserved my own clothes, skirts that didn’t have to be pulled in at my waist with a safety pin and made with other fabrics than polyester.
I didn’t realize it at the time but that afternoon was profound in that someone loved me enough to convince me that I was a person who was worthy of having her own style.

Rufus writes;
“We might not find our post-self-loathing selves in magazines, waving to us from fashion spreads but we can ‘hear’ our true ‘languages’ in books, films, pictures, nature, music, laughter: wherever real or pretend people are. Make it a game—a sacred secret game. What ‘speaks’ to you? Names? Colors? Landscapes? Lines of dialogue? Each is a starting point. Each is a tiny light.”
6. Offer yourself loving kindness

I am referring here to the kind of loving kindness meditation that Sharon Salzberg describes in her book, “Real Happiness”. 

The practice of loving kindness meditation is done by silently repeating certain phrases that express kind wishes for ourselves, then for a series of others. 

The customary phrases are usually variations on May I Be Safe (or May I Be Free From Danger), May I Be Happy, May I Be Healthy, May I Live with Ease—may daily life not be a struggle. 

The “May I” is not meant to be begging or beseeching but is said in the spirit of generously blessing ourselves and others: May I Be Happy. May You Be Happy.

During the MBSR course I mentioned above, we participated in several loving kindness meditations.

When offering loving kindness to ourselves, we were instructed to put a hand over our heart if our inner critic was especially loud or if we were stuck in self-judging mode. Although I felt a tad stupid, this gesture did seem to invoke some compassion for myself.

7. Ditch regret

Sometimes our self-hatred is deeply embedded in regret. We just can’t let go of that STUPID thing we did in 2004 or last week.

Regret is another of the 10 hidden self-esteem booby traps Rufus lists in “Unworthy.” 

She asks an important question: “What would it take to not look back?” 

Then she tells the story of the musician Orpheus, in Greek mythology, who is destroyed by the death of his bride Eurydice.

Hades and Persephone, rulers of the Underworld tell Orpheus that he is allowed to bring Eurydice back to the world of the living if he meets one condition: throughout the whole journey, Orpheus must walk in front of Eurydice and never look back. Even one look will thrust Eurydice back to Hades forever. 

Rufus writes:
"Resist looking back in regret as if your current and future life and the current and future lives of your dearest ones depended on it. Because it does. They do. Like all bad habits, this one can be broken.  
It might take prayer. It might take conditioning techniques. (As soon as you catch yourself regretting, firmly turn your attention to something else, something positive: a song, pictures of your “happy place,” whatever you would like to learn, real or imaginary tennis games.) … 
Today. Is the first day. Right here and right now, we must simply say okay. Face forward and walk on. This is the bravest act."
8. Be Held in Prayer

In her book, “Radical Acceptance,” meditation teacher and psychotherapist Tara Brach tells the story of one of her clients, Marian, whose second husband used to lock Marian’s daughters inside their bedroom and demand oral sex. 

When Marian learned of this, she was crushed with guilt.

Afraid she might harm herself, she sought counsel from an elderly Jesuit priest who had been one of her teachers in college. 

Brach explains:
"When she calmed down, he gently took one of her hands and began drawing a circle in the center of her palm. “This is where you are living. It is painful—a place of kicking and screaming and deep, deep hurt. This place cannot be avoided, let it be.”
Then he covered her whole hand with his. “But if you can,” he went on, “try also to remember this. 
There is a greatness, a wholeness that is the kingdom of God and in THIS merciful space your immediate life can unfold. This pain,” and he again touched the center of her palm, “is held always in God’s love. As you know both the pain and the love, your wounds will heal.”
I was moved by that story because in those moments in which I’ve hated myself the most—on the brink of taking my own life–I have felt the loving presence of God holding me together. 

Like Marian, I was able to find the way back to my heart by being held in the infinite compassion of God. If you are uncomfortable with the concept of God, you can reach out to the universe or some other being to hold you in compassion.




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7 Quick Ways to Calm Down




by Therese Borchard -

I’m easily overwhelmed. When my kids’ exuberant screams reach a decibel level my ears can’t tolerate, when Chuck E., the life-size “rat” at the pizza place, starts doing his jig while flashing arcade lights blind me, or when I open my email to find 100 messages, I feel a meltdown coming on.

This is why I came up with seven quick ways to calm myself down.

I turn to these when I don’t have time to call my mom and hear her tell me “Everything is going to be fine.” They keep me centered and grounded for as long as possible, and they help me relax my body, even during those times when screaming kids and dancing life-size rats converge.


WAYS TO CALM DOWN:

1. Walk Away 

Know your triggers. If a conversation about global warming, consumerism, or the trash crisis in the U.S. is overwhelming you, simply excuse yourself. If you’re noise-sensitive and the scene at Toys-R-Us makes you want to throw whistling Elmo and his buddies across the store, tell your kids you need a time-out. (Bring along your husband or a friend so you can leave them safely, if need be.) My great-aunt Gigi knew her trigger points, and if a conversation or setting was getting close to them, she simply put one foot in front of another and departed.

2. Close Your Eyes 

Gently let the world disappear and go within to regain your equilibrium. Ever since my mom came down with blepharospasm (a neurological tick of the eyelid), I’ve become aware of how important shutting our eyes is to the health of the nervous system. The only treatment available for this disorder is to have surgery that permanently keeps your eyelids open (you need to moisten them with drops, etc.). Such a condition would be living hell for my mom, because in closing her eyes she regains her balance and proper focus.

The only time I recommend not using this technique is on the road (if you’re driving).

3. Find Some Solitude 

This can be challenging if you’re at work or at home with kids as creative and energetic as mine. But we all need some private time to let the nervous system regenerate.

I must have known this back in college, because I opted for a tiny single room (a nun’s closet, quite literally), rather than going in on a larger room with a closet big enough to store my sweaters. When three of my good friends begged me to go in with them on a killer quad, I told them, “Nope. Can’t do it. Need my alone time or else none of you would want to be around me. Trust me.”

My senior year I went to the extent of pasting black construction paper on the window above my door so no one would know if I was there in order to get the hours of solitude that I needed.

Be creative. Find your space. Any way you can. Even it involves black construction paper.

4. Go Outside 

This is a true lifesaver for me. I need to be outside for at least an hour every day to get my sanity fix. Granted, I’m extremely lucky to be able to do so as a stay-at-home mom. But I think I would somehow work it into my schedule even if I had to commute into the city every day.

Even if I’m not walking, running, biking, or swimming, being outside calms me in a way that hardly anything else can. With an hour of nature, I go from being a bossy, opinionated, angry, cynical, uptight person into a bossy, opinionated, cynical, relaxed person. And that makes the difference between having friends and a husband to have dinner with and a world that tells me to go eat a frozen dinner by myself because they don’t want to catch whatever grumpy bug I have.

5. Find Some Water 

While watching Disney’s Pocahontas the other day with my daughter Katherine (yes, I do get some of my best insights from cartoons), I observed the sheer joy the main character shows upon paddling down the river, singing about how she is one with the water. It reminded me of how universal the mood effects of water are and how healing.

On the rainy or snowy days that I can’t walk the double stroller over to our local creeks, I do something the global-warming guys say not to: take a long shower, imagining that I am in the middle of a beautiful Hawaiian rain forest.

“Water helps in many ways,” writes Elaine Aron. “When over aroused, keep drinking it—a big glass of it, once an hour. Walk beside some water, look at it, listen to it. Get into some if you can, for a bath or a swim. Hot tubs and hot springs are popular for good reasons.”

6. Breathe Deeply 

Breathing is the foundation of sanity, because it is the way we provide our brain and every other vital organ in our body with the oxygen needed for us to survive. Breathing also eliminates toxins from our systems.

Years ago, I learned the Four-Square method of breathing to reduce anxiety:
  • 1. Breathe in slowly to a count of four.
  • 2. Hold the breath for a count of four.
  • 3. Exhale slowly through pursed lips to a count of four.
  • 4. Rest for a count of four (without taking any breaths).
  • 5. Take two normal breaths.
  • 6. Start over again with number one.
7. Listen to Music 

Across the ages, music has been used to soothe and relax. During the worst months of my depression, I blared the soundtrack of The Phantom of the Opera. Pretending to be the phantom with a cape and a mask, I twirled around our living room, swinging my kids in my arms. I belted out every word of “The Music of the Night.”

“Softly, deftly, music shall caress you, Feel it, hear it, secretly possess you …” The gorgeous song—like all good music—could stroke that tender place within me that words couldn’t get to.

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