I got this from a blog I read every day and has helped me to love my more. The blog is Lessons from a Recovering Doormat by Daylle Deanna Schwartz. Here is today's blog post:
I know other authors have said similar things - but since I have been focusing on self love as part of reducing my weight I thought this was a good post, especially the bottom about self-love and asking ourselves what is right with me - versus what is wrong......So, what is right with you? How can you move to what is right for you? to self-love.
Honestly - as I sat here and reread this - I tapped into my deep self- love and let it fill all of me - and then I started to cry because it is hard for me to remember being told affirmations or that someone loved me - it just urges me to want to love me more, and I want to share affirmations and love with those who have loved me as I am right now. So to my girl posse - DJ, RP, AC, PC - I love you!!!
I’m delighted to have Dr. Mark Chironna,
certified life coach, author, and spiritual director as my guest today.
Dr. Chironna’s authentic and compassionate approach to purposeful,
destiny-infused living has transformed lives everywhere through
one-on-one mentoring, speaking engagements, print and electronic media.
His book, Live Your Dream, is an inspiring and practical handbook for strategic living. His latest release, 7 Secrets to Unfolding Destiny, is a practical, interactive tool that will help you reach your full potential.
With Self-Love Month approaching in January, I talked Dr. Chironna
and asked him to share some of his insights with you. Finding your
purpose is an act of self-love. If you can tap into your own destiny,
you give yourself a major key to happiness. That’s definitely a loving
place to be! Here’s what he had to say:
Why do you think many people don’t live their dreams?
I believe at least in portion that one of the reasons is, first and
foremost, they don’t know how to get from where they are to where they
want to be. Sometimes the root of that stuck state is tied to second
guessing their own capability, capacity and competency to get there
because by the time they’re 18 years old they’ve heard negative and
non-affirming statements millions of times more than they’ve heard
affirming statements. In spite of these incredible in-built desires that
can lead them to the kind of outcomes they deeply long for, they fight
within themselves in a way because they’re constantly having to overcome
the kind of negative self-talk that’s gotten so deeply imbedded they’re
not even fully conscious of it anymore. 70% of negative self-talk goes
undetected by the conscious mind. The lions share of those negative
belief systems are at work under the surface until we learn how to
unearth them and look at them face to face to get unstuck.
How can someone begin to find their purpose when they’re stuck?
The reality is more people than not are in their predicament because
they have spent a good portion their growing up years listening to what
others told they should, they ought, they must do. They never gave
themselves permission to ask “Are those things congruent with who I am?”
Your identity is your destiny and when you’re told you should, ought or
must do this, all very unaffirming drivers which negate any road away
from genuine self-esteem, and self-acceptance, you end up living to
please other people. And you spend all your energy making them accept
you rather than you coming to terms with being comfortable in your own
skin so you can bring your unique factor to the table and give
legitimate voice to who you really are. The real issue in terms of what
do you do begins with asking the question “Who am I?” because your
identity is ultimately your destiny.
How does fear hold us back? Most people live in what
they believe is their comfort zone, which is an illusion. It’s a little
box that you oscillate back and forth in between fear of failure and
fear of success. You never get out of the box because when you get too
close to failure, you put on all the effort you can to not deal with the
fear of failure so you run back to success. But when you get too close
to success you question whether you have the capacity to handle it so
unknowingly you sabotage yourself and head back towards the fear of
failure. I call that the comfort zone because it’s the place we’ve
become comfortable operating but not the place we’re intended to operate
from.
I have found that the fear of failure and fear of success are the
polarizing factors around which the other fears constellate. You’ve got
to learn to face those fears down, and challenge them, argue with them
and not assume that just because you’re feeling them it’s who you are.
At the core of your being, who you are is far greater than that.
Why do you think so many people don’t love themselves?
There is a medical term that [the late] Dr. Conrad Baars, an eminent
psychiatrist called it–deprivation neurosis. He meant that oftentimes in
life, no one gives us the gift of affirmations so we never can become
who we are and celebrate who we are. Significant others have always
praised our performance or demanded perfect performance and never simply
celebrated our essence. When I don’t get the gift of affirmation that
is absolutely tied to who I am as apart from what I do, I end up
believing I have to do to become who I am.
With that we set up a whole cycle of pain, disappointment and
sabotage because no one has ever said “You’re a wonderful person” or “I
love you.” All of us growing up need someone who offers us that
unconditional love and affirmation. If you didn’t get it you need to
figure out how to appropriate it into your own life with your own
disciplines and practices and also by building relationships with people
who are not toxic or dysfunctional. [You need} someone who genuinely
cares about you and can mirror back that you’re a good person and have
gifts and capacities. All of us struggle with this. To me the key to why
people don’t celebrate who they are is they don’t feel good about
themselves. They feel they don’t measure up.
How would you define self-love? When I’m talking
about self-love I’m not talking about an egocentric narcissist, consumed
with myself, which is born out of insecurity. Self-esteem is a feeling,
a reflection of the respect, love and value you have for yourself. It’s
a skill that has to be developed. We’re not taught that skill in
school. At some point you have to understand that you have to affirm and
value who you are. If you don’t, you can’t give anyone else anything
because you can’t give what you don’t have.
When people are in low ego, it means they are really comfortable in
their skin. They don’t have to prove anything to anyone. They celebrate
who they are and are in very high esteem because nobody can take away
from them the value they know they’re worth. They live an affirming
lifestyle and treat themselves in ways that they would like to be
treated. Someone who is truly living an affirming lifestyle has the
ability to bring others people into aliveness because they’re not
carrying around the excess baggage of trying to please anybody else.
They’re done playing that game.
How can people increase their self-love? You can
spend the rest of your life looking at what’s wrong with you. Then you
have people in positive psychology movement like Martin Seligman who
ask, “What’s right with me?” Learning how to apply those principles
helps you build up a reserve internally of affirming feelings and a
sense of being motivated to getting your want to like yourself back.
Then your how to will follow. If you work with these principles, they
will work with you. In my opinion they’re inexorable laws. They govern
the functioning of human existence. When we can tap into those things we
can sit back and let those principles operate in us and bring us into a
real sense of freedom and self-worth and, all that’s tied to learning
how to appropriately and diligently love who we are.
–Check out Dr. Mark Chironna‘s latest book, 7 Secrets to Unfolding Destiny.
Read more: http://blog.beliefnet.com/lessonsfromarecoveringdoormat/2011/11/finding-your-purpose-with-dr-mark-chironna.html#ixzz1dzGxfGOg
No comments:
Post a Comment