Friday, August 14, 2015

What to Do if You Were Taught Not to Take Care of Yourself

selfish_or_selfless Selfish or Self-Care?


It seems when I was a child I was never taught about self-care or to want things. Whenever I wanted something, I was accused of being selfish.  It didn't matter if I was tired or just not wanting to do chores. I heard it so much and so often and didn't want to think I was anything bad like that, I stopped taking care of myself in many different ways. If taking care of me was selfish, than taking care of and pleasing others was unselfish . And I'd much rather be unselfish. I suspect many people and maybe more women are taught this self-defeating, unloving attitude by other women - mostly their mothers who had learned the same thing in their early lives.

If you experienced something like that dynamic somewhere in your past, you might find it difficult to rest enough, difficult to eat well, difficult to take care of your body in other ways. You might find it difficult to take care of yourself in relationships. You might judge your emotions as unworthy of a good (unselfish) person. You might also find it difficult to have healthy boundaries and difficult to stand up for what you know is right.

How do I know all of this? I know it because I have lived it in one way or another. So what do you do if you see yourself in these words?

  • Start paying attention to how you treat yourself. Take a little notebook and write down the ways you see you not taking good physical care of yourself. Then get support to change those old habits. Find someone or someones who will help you understand that you are infected with wrong thinking. Funny. My mother also said, "God helps those who help themselves." I'll buy that one. So I help myself.
  • Start paying attention to how others treat you. Are you taken advantage of in relationships? Are you expected to give more than your partner? Are you underpaid? Do you do work that is unsatisfying? Talk to someone who loves you enough to be an honest mirror and listen to what they are saying. It is most likely the truth and you most likely know it is deep down inside yourself.
Find support to learn to love yourself from the inside out.

YOU University Coaching/Life Coach Training and Life Coaching 

8 comments:

  1. Bravo!

    Wonderful piece on self-care. I am also an advocate of self-care. I'm a massage therapist, yoga instructor and author of - You Deserve The Royal Treatment, A Woman's Guide to Living Royally. As you, I believe self-care doesn't have to cost a million, there are many ways to take time for yourself, without slipping into a pile of debt.

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  2. Maia - this is terrific. Thanks for always giving such great guidance for how we can live better, happier lives.

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  3. You are welcome. I seem to be able to learn things and then express them and I love doing it. Loving uncovering my own gifts and talents.

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  4. This was helpful to me right now. I am setting new goals and they don't have to be about pleasing others.

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  5. How Life Coaching Helps You...

    +related+blog...

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  6. certified life coachingOctober 5, 2010 at 1:00 PM

    I am grateful with this article on how Maia give tips on how we can take care ourselves. Love first yourself and you'll be happy right?

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  7. This is really important. So many people think of anything selfish as being bad, yet most of what we do good in the world (in my opinion) is for self. People do good deeds and it makes them happy. It is about that happiness, personal happiness, and that makes the world a better place for us all. Thanks Maia

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Thank you for your thoughts.