Do you feel unsupported and as though you’re not appreciated?
Do you get upset and
frustrated by these feelings?
Do you dream of being
valued and admired?
I do. I feel
unappreciated and undervalued regularly. I feel unsupported by those around me
and ignored generally. But what I’ve realised is that I’m the one who is
ignoring me; I don’t appreciate or support myself emotionally, and I definitely
struggle with valuing myself.
“If you really put a small value
upon yourself, rest assured that the world will not raise your price”. –
Unknown
Recently my husband
did something minor that upset me and I thought to myself ‘he doesn’t respect
me!’ But then I stopped and asked myself, is that true? And I realised it
wasn’t. Then I thought about why I felt that way and asked myself, it’s you who
isn’t respecting youself, isn’t it? I was reflecting how I felt about myself onto my
husband.
You see, I’ve been
working toward self-trust by feeling and listening to my feelings, setting
boundaries and limits as a way to create self-confidence and self-assurance.
I’ve been working on self-care and self-love to build myself up, but I hadn’t
stopped to ask myself if I was proud of how far I’d come and earnt
some self-respect through this process.
It hasn’t been easy.
I’ve been angry at myself for a long time, especially about moving overseas for
someone who I felt let down and unsupported by. And that anger has led to
behavior that has damaged my marriage and affected my ability to parent
effectively, frustrating my desire to be a calm interactive mum. And I’ve had a
lot of feelings from my abusive childhood to confront and work through before I
could begin on the current stuff. It’s been hard.
So I ask myself: do I respect the effort I've made to repair the damage in my marriage and the commitment to being a better mum? And I realise I struggle with being proud of myself about anything.
So I ask myself: do I respect the effort I've made to repair the damage in my marriage and the commitment to being a better mum? And I realise I struggle with being proud of myself about anything.
So how do I change
this and earn some self-respect? What do I need to do to change my thinking to
achieve that?
“Self-respect, self-worth and self-love all start with
self. Stop looking outside yourself for value.” - Rob Liano
I start by looking at how I approach the
things I want to do. My expectations of myself are low. I accept that I am not disciplined or have no will-power to follow through as quickly as I would
like. I avoid committing myself to anything - including my dreams. I delay and
make excuses and procrastinate – a procrastination that’s based in fear.
But the fear is not
about failure, it’s about success. If I succeed then I have to
sustain that success and hold myself to a higher standard and have an
expectation of myself. But what if I let myself down? What if I’m not good enough?
When I back-track the feeling of not being good enough, I arrive at my parents. As a child I wasn’t
enough to get their attention or their interest, or hold it for more than a few
minutes. Most of the time I felt like a burden – and they often told me I was. The
wounds from that live on in my current life, showing up in the form of not feeling good enough in
my present relationships or friendships. I feel undervalued and as though it is
my fault in some way and that I’m doing something wrong.
I am doing something wrong – I’m not respecting myself.
I am doing something wrong – I’m not respecting myself.
I’m busy looking for
validation or approval from them, rather than from myself. I’m waiting for
other people to tell me I’m ok before I let myself feel ok. I’m forgetting
that the only approval I need is mine; that the only person’s permission I need
to feel good about myself is my own.
“Respect yourself and others will respect
you.” - Confusius
The next thing to do
to start valuing myself is look at all the things I’ve achieved that I can be
proud of, like giving up smoking, finishing my novel, and self-publishing a
collection of my writing. But I need to also look at my day to day and all the things
I do on a daily basis too.
A few years ago I
worked through a book called ‘Have The Relationship You Want’ by Rori Raye. One
of the chapters is called ‘Overfunctioning’, which offers an exercise where you
write a list of all the things you do day to day and prioritise them from 1-4:
1 = ‘must do’
2 = ‘can do but can
let it slide’
3 = ‘not sure if that
is for me to be doing’
4 = ‘it’s not my job’
When I first did this I
was shocked at how much I did and how many things weren’t really my
responsibility, as well as how many I could let go, or pass over to my
husband. Doing this exercise again I see that I’m still doing a great deal.
So I need to
acknowledge that and appreciate and value how much I am doing. Take a moment to
feel good about that.
But is that all I need
to do? Write a list and pat myself on the back and maybe do some positive
affirmations and I’ll respect myself? No.
It goes deeper than
that. I need to believe that my dreams and goals are inevitable and not a 'maybe
or a ‘one day’ – that with persistent continuous action they WILL happen. I
need to believe I have the determination and self-discipline to see them through.
“Respect your efforts, respect
yourself. Self-respect leads to self-discipline. When you have both firmly
under your belt, that's real power.” - Clint Eastwood
It’s only through
action that I can earn my self-respect. I need to show myself that I take
myself seriously. I need to value everything I do as well as acknowledge how
much I do.
And not only the big
achievements either; it can be small things too. Not just the publication of my
book, but creating the schedule that I followed to keep writing regularly to
complete that book.
This, coupled with a
commitment to self-care, nurturing and loving myself, and not judging or
critcising myself, can build a foundation of self-respect.
If I see what I can achieve
and how capable I am, it will spark me to do more, rather than make excuses.
Self-confidence is the most attractive quality a
person can have. How can anyone see how great you are, if you don’t see it
yourself? - Unknown.
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