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Be Good to Yourself: 10 Powerful Ways to Practice Self-Love

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“Self-love, self-respect, self-worth: There’s a reason they all start with ‘self.’ You can’t find them in anyone else.” ~Unknown

It was one of those nights.

I was in a busy New York bar, having fun and enjoying myself. That was, until someone asked me: “So, what do you do?

Within a few seconds my fun, happy, playful side vanished and in entered a girl full of doubts and insecurity.

The truth was… I had no freaking idea about what I was doing! I had just left my corporate job and now I was on a journey to discover what I truly wanted to do in life.

That question stripped me down to feeling naked and exposed. Because I didn’t have a job title.  (Unless “I-don’t-know-what-I’m-doing-with-my-life” works?) I had nothing externally to “prove” my worthiness with.

I’ve always been pretty confident. My dad used to give me incentives for challenging myself. “Climb up that wall and I’ll buy you an ice cream.” “Be Santa Claus for your siblings and you’ll get that nail polish you really want.”

So, I never had a problem saying yes to things, such as taking job offers abroad and accepting challenging positions and demanding projects. Of course I had moments of doubt, but even when I doubted myself, I always said yes and found a solution one way or another.

Until that moment in the bar, I had (unconsciously, of course) proved my worth through my achievements. I had thought of myself as someone who valued herself no matter the job title, relationship status, or bank account condition.

But, when I left my job and other external things fell apart, so did my value. Or at least, that’s what it felt like.

In short, I had confused self-confidence with self-esteem. Oops!

Here’s what I mean by this:

Self-confidence is about trusting yourself and your abilities. For example, you can be confident in one area, such as cooking, dancing, or communicating, but then insecure in another, such as dancing or public speaking.

Self-esteem, on the other hand, is about how you see yourself. It’s about your perception of your worth. No matter what happens on the outside, do you treat yourself with love, care, and respect or not?

As a high-achiever, it’s easy to trick yourself and think you have self-esteem. I mean, as long as you perform and do well, it’s all good, right?

Yeah, until you don’t. That’s when the sh*t hits the fan…

When I realized that I saw myself as less worthy, cool, and interesting because of my external circumstances, I decided this wasn’t good enough for me. And it shouldn’t be good enough for you either, if this resonates. As they say, your biggest breakdowns often become your greatest breakthroughs.

So, I got to work. This time, not by proving my value, but by practicing self-love. Below are some of the most powerful ways I’ve discovered to do just that:

1. Focus on being someone who loves.

If you’re in a place today where you don’t love yourself, it’s hard to take a quantum leap and become someone who does. Just like when you’re building muscles, self-love takes consistent practice.

Instead of loving yourself, focus on being someone who loves. That is, allow love to flow through you as often as possible. Focus on what you love about the people you meet. Focus on what you appreciate while going to the store, sitting in a meeting, or while speaking to someone. Simply, adjust your body to positive emotions by finding as many things to love and appreciate as possible.

2. Tap into what it looks and feels like to be loved.

It’s easy to be loving toward ourselves when things go as planned, when we succeed and people like us. Not so much when stuff falls apart, we screw up or get rejected. When we struggle the most, that’s also when we tend to be hardest on ourselves.

In those moments, ask yourself how someone who loves you deeply you would act. What would they say? What would they do? How would they behave? Odds are, they wouldn’t criticize, judge, and berate you. They’d offer you kindness, compassion, and acceptance. If you can’t think about a specific person or memory, imagine how the most loving human on this planet would be toward you. Then practice being that toward yourself.

3. Stop comparing yourself.

Comparison is a killer to self-love. And we aren’t usually very nice when it comes to comparisons, right? Instead, we take our greatest flaws and compare them to someone else’s greatest success. In short, you’re doomed to fail.

Instead, realize that you write your story. Realize that you can’t compare your life to someone else’s because no matter how well you know them, you never know how they feel or how they perceive their life. Instead, spend your time and energy to nourish and build your path.

4. Take baby steps to create the life you long for.

Desires are powerful. And so, to take action turn those dreams into reality is to honor and care for yourself. By taking daily actions, you signal that you’re worthy of living the life you desire.

It doesn’t have to be big action—just small and consistent steps in the direction that stirs joy, care, and excitement. This demonstrates that you care and respect your dreams and thus yourself. Has there ever been a better time to do that than now?

5. Ask your guidance system for help.

Imagine that your emotions are guiding you. When you feel good about yourself, it means that what you’re thinking is aligned with how your soul/higher self sees you. When you feel bad about yourself, it’s a red flag telling you that a change of perspective is needed

If you think a thought such as “I am [something you don’t like about yourself],” how does that feel? Probably not so good, right? Then it’s a sign to think a different thought. Try to replace that with something kinder. For example, “I’m just so lost and confused” can be replaced with “I’m doing the best I can to move forward.”

6. Surround yourself with people you feel good with.

Oh, this is an important one! You may have heard Jim Rohn’s famous quote before: “You are the average of the five people you spend the most time with.” Think about who those people currently are. Do they inspire, fill you up, and want what’s best for you?

Just because you’ve been friends doesn’t mean you need to keep spending time together. Just because you’re taking a break from someone, doesn’t mean you won’t be close again. Be picky about who you spend your time with—don’t give it away in the spirit of mercy. (That’s not nice, neither to you or the other person). Be there because you want to; otherwise, don’t.

7. Be compassionate when sh*t hits the fan.

So many of us (myself included) tend to beat ourselves down when we need our love the most. When we fail or screw up or someone rejects us, that’s the time we often get even more down on ourselves. Beating someone who’s lying down, sounds fair? Um, nope.

So instead, choose to be most loving and forgiving with yourself when things don’t go as planned. When you stumble and fall. When you say the wrong things. When someone rejects you or a project fails. Ask yourself what you need and then spray that all over yourself.

8. Make room for healthy habits.

Yep yep! Start truly caring for yourself by mirroring that in what you eat, how you exercise, and what you spend time doing. Do stuff, not to “get it done” or because you “have to,” but because you care about you.

Don’t feel like going to the gym? Then maybe put on a soul-soothing podcast and go for a walk. Create habits that are healthy, not just mentally but also emotionally.

9. Postpone your worry and negative thoughts.

Are you ready for a really great tip? If so, then get excited. A very powerful technique I recently discovered is called a “worry-free month” (named it myself). Think about how much of your worry that actually serves you. Sure, some of the worry has a purpose, as it tends to give us a little kick when we need to get our sh*t together and start acting.

But, my guess is that 97% of it is useless. Whenever those thoughts enter your mind, tell them, “Thanks, but I’ll deal with this next month.” By telling your mind that you’ll deal with it later (plus saying when), you stop feeding negative thoughts and thus decrease its momentum. Then, you simply do this month after month.

10. Accept what you cannot love.

This might have been the greatest game-changer for me. Because let’s face it: It’s easy to love what you love about yourself and not so easy with the things you don’t. So, instead of even aiming to love those parts, which will probably just make your mind go “Are you kidding me?”, focus on accepting them.

One thing I’ve had a hard time accepting about myself is that at times, and for no real reason, I can get very nervous. Simple things, such as going to the supermarket can feel very difficult. Instead of rejecting or trying to love this nervous side of myself, I’m reminding myself to accept it. When it happens, I’ll tell myself something along the lines of “It’s okay, I can be nervous going to the supermarket today. It’s not the end of the world.”

You don’t need to love everything about yourself to develop self-love; all you need is acceptance. Next time something happens that makes you want to get down on yourself, see this as your practice to accept what is.

Care for the World by Caring for Yourself’

Life is full of ups and down. Health can transfer into disease. Successes can be turned into collapses. Romantic love can be transformed into coldness. But, no matter what happens on the outside, we can still have a solid foundation built on self-love.

Self-love isn’t a luxury; it’s a necessity in today’s society. So, start implementing some of the practices above and most of all, have compassion with yourself when you fall short. Then simply brush yourself off and get back into it again. As they say, practice makes perfect.

Finally, realize that by caring for yourself, you care for this world. Your actions have a ripple effect on others.

About Maria Stenvinkel

Maria Stenvinkel is on a mission to help you move from fear to fearless—and to unleash your confidence, greater potential, and true self-love. Download her free and powerful worksheet: "The Secret to Boosting Your Self-Confidence [Easy Worksheet]."

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Tony W

I believe the question what do you do is a buzz kill for many reasons.
Great tips. They give me something to think about.
#1 is a great starting point. It reminds me of the Theodore Roosevelt Quote. “Nobody cares how much you know, until they know how much you care”

Maria Stenvinkel
Reply to  Tony W

Oh, I LOVE that quote! Never heard it before. Thanks for sharing Tony 🙂

Bethany
Bethany

I love that distinction between self-confidence and self-esteem! I’ve had that same experience. I took thought I had self-esteem because I was confident in many things. It wasn’t until I failed, I realized that my confidence was covering up the fact that I did not value my worth in a truly deep way.

Mary Ellen Clark
Mary Ellen Clark

Great tips Maria! I have been making steps toward more self love and these tips will help me add new ways of working towards that goal. I have made several break throughs and in those moments have had love pouring back to me. I almost freak out from the response. Obviously I have more work to do. : )

Maria Stenvinkel
Reply to  Bethany

Those two are so easy to confuse! I know.. it isn’t until you actually fail or step outside your comfort zone that your self-esteem is revealed. Thanks for sharing Bethany!

Maria Stenvinkel

Oh wow!! That’s amazing. I love what you wrote “.. and in those moments have had love pouring back to me.” That’s incredible 🙂

Kari Dahlgren
Kari Dahlgren

“Self-confidence is about trusting yourself and your abilities.” That hit home so hard. Needed this today. Thanks Maria 🙂

Mike
Mike

Thank you…….I only made it to number 3 and I feel wonderful……I wrote this comment before reading any further……Appreciate your view

J. Kirra
J. Kirra

I’ve heard all of these tips before but I really needed a good hard reminder of these things right now. This is a well written article. Thank you!

Jambonit
Jambonit

This does nothing but make me want to toss my cookies. A lesson on how to be even more egocentric, which is the number one cause for societies ever increasing degradation. Self, self, self, and self. Yep, the counter-culture teaching of altruism. Congrats to all the self-centered egomaniacs who adhere to this nauseating form of teaching and for allowing themselves to be brainwashed into believing this is how you learn to love others. Pffft.

Maria Stenvinkel
Reply to  J. Kirra

Thanks a lot!! 🙂

Maria Stenvinkel
Reply to  Kari Dahlgren

Thanks a lot Kari! Appreciate you sharing that with me :))

Maria Stenvinkel
Reply to  Jambonit

Thanks for sharing your view! What do you suggest is a better approach? Curious* Have a great day! Maria

Maria Stenvinkel
Reply to  Mike

Ohhh, thanks a lot Mike! :))

Alixandria
Alixandria
Reply to  Jambonit

Actually, this is the flip side of self, self, self. As a person who has been dealing with mild to severe depression for decades, I can tell you that the majority of depressed people don’t realize how incredibly self-focused they are. Their problems (real or imagined) are like a baby Alien – firmly attached to their faces so they have trouble seeing anything else. Articles like this are very helpful in learning how to be less self-destructing and closer to mentally healthy.
The distinction between self-confidence and self-esteem is great, but my favorite part was when she went totally against the New Agey crap and said you don’t have to love EVERYTHING about yourself, but learn to ACCEPT everything. I have always had Thunder Thighs and no force on Earth could ever get me to love the way they look. However, I am grateful I at least have functioning thighs and am learning to accept them.
By the way, I didn’t see anything about “this is how you learn to love others”. My take on the ripple effect she mentions is that when you’re finally not all about your pain/your misery/your issues, you can start seeing the world with a more balanced eye and begin to participate in the world not solely on how it affects YOU.
I’m sorry that this article wasn’t helpful for you, but I’m hopeful that means you are mentally very healthy and don’t need suggestions on how to love and/or accept yourself.

David
David

A few months ago I had an experience which I interpreted as someone’s attempt to kill me. Never mind the details in the context of this article. Suffice it to say, I had both a jolt to my self-esteem and my self-confidence, and also a reverse reaction. The fact that I survived and lived to tell the tale gave me too much confidence all at once, even as my self-esteem sunk to its lowest in my life. Intuitively I made much use of what is in this article even before I read it. However, when the true Sh*t really hits the fan and your very life is at stake, you don’t have time for much by way of these kinds of thoughts. You have to act on a moment-by-moment basis and you need to be extremely focused. Now that the event is mostly past me, I am working to let my self-confidence come down a bit, and for my self-esteem to improve, so that both are balanced at the level they once were. What the basis of self-esteem to me means is, “I am worthy of existence.” When another person tries to nullify your existence by killing you, it challenges your thought — did I deserve it somehow? I said no, but it was still a blow. I have to say that I interpret most of this article as being good advice for the “worried well,” but for people with serious threats to their life, you don’t worry about self-love conceptually, and of having a “worry free month.” You act to survive at whatever the cost one day at a time.

Olivia
Olivia

This really shows how powerful thoughts are! It’s so important to be patient during this process. So often I have fallen into the trap of being too harsh on myself. I would constantly think”why cant I just do this simple self-love thing”? But it took alot of time to automatically make the assumptions I make now its going to take alot of time change them.

David
David

Yes that helps. The distinction between self-esteem and self-confidence helped me to understand what happened to me. Many thanks!

Maria Stenvinkel
Reply to  David

Hi David! Thanks for sharing your story. Of course it’s a different story if you’re living with serious threats for your life. This is for a longer term perspective and when you’re not in a direct fight or flight mood. Hope this helps! Maria

lv2terp
lv2terp

GREAT post!!! Thank you for the reminders, insight, and points to ponder and apply to continue improving on the self love and acceptance journey! 🙂

Maria Stenvinkel
Reply to  lv2terp

Thanks a lot! 🙂

Maria Stenvinkel
Reply to  Olivia

Patience is key 🙂 But small shifts every day makes a massive difference! xoxo, Maria

Ariel Harris
Ariel Harris

I think you said it so well that when we have that solid foundation of self love, nothing can batter us. Thank you for a lovely helpful article. IN peace and gratitude, ariel

Maria Stenvinkel
Reply to  Ariel Harris

Thank you Ariel! <3

Fabulously Single
Fabulously Single

It’s easy to be loving toward ourselves when things go as planned, when we succeed and people like us. Not so much when stuff falls apart, we screw up or get rejected. When we struggle the most, that’s also when we tend to be hardest on ourselves.
That really hit home for me. This is something everyone should read. We are taught so much, but never how important it is to love ourselves.

Chelsea St Cyr
Chelsea St Cyr

loved this article. especially where it says to accept the things you cannot love because before I thought you had to love every part of yourself. This was mind-opening.

Vince Rodrigues
Vince Rodrigues

Thank you so much, Maria Stenvinkel <3

Stephen Mccormack
Stephen Mccormack

Amazing post, some top tips on here which I will try and integrate into my life on a daily basis. So true this is how important it has been for me in my journey to learn to love myself and this in turn spills out to others.

Thank you
God bless

Bob MacCallum
Bob MacCallum

My name is Bob MacCallum and I will be giving a class on self love to seniors at Rio Salada College in Surprise, AZ on 2/14/2019. I would like to give your “10 ways to practice self-love” to the class as a hand out. Credit will be given to you and Little Buddha if I have your permission to use the material. By the way, I think it’s great!

Maria Stenvinkel

Epic! xoxo

Maria Stenvinkel
Reply to  Bob MacCallum

OF COURSE BOB!! Good luck to you :))

Maria Stenvinkel

Thank you Vince! 🙂 <3

Maria Stenvinkel
Reply to  Chelsea St Cyr

Ohhh that’s awesome to hear! xoxo

Bob MacCallum
Bob MacCallum

Thanks Maria. I’ll let you know how the class turns out.

Chloé Brooks
Chloé Brooks
Reply to  Alixandria

that is so true.
I read in a book that people who help others are actually happier, because they’re focusing less on themselves and and their own problems, but instead on how they can help other people.

jo ann
jo ann

hi Maria, thank you for this heartfelt post. i’m currently going through something which makes me dig deep into me and realize how i have not been very kind, accepting and loving towards myself, and others. i’ve been giving my energy to the wrong people and end up getting so hurt. i haven’t really worked on finding that courage to truly be me – accepting my flaws and believing my worth. these bad experiences just keep on repeating and i want to truly put effort now into practicing self love. i just celebrated my 47th birthday and i want this time to be about me, to live life having a healthy loving relationship w myself. this desire brought me here, so thank you for your words, they’re what i needed to hear.

Veerain
Veerain

Amazing…. So beautifully written … God bless your soul 🙌❤️

Thembelani
Thembelani

Maria thanks for your insights. I kindly ask to use them in my public wisdom sessions. I am based in Cape Town South Africa. All credit is yours…God bless you

Michelle Xu
Michelle Xu

This was the best article I’ve ever read about self-love. It might have changed my life – these aren’t just superficial fixes; you write from a place of truth and compassion. Thank you so much!!

R. Michelle
R. Michelle

It is 2021 and I found this article. It has great power. Thank you for taking the journey that led you to these affirming actions. Thank you for finding all the best ways to articulate them. Thank you for sharing them And may you always keep them with you❤️

Deborah  Humphreys
Deborah Humphreys

Hi, I’ve recently split up from my bf, it was a toxic relationship. But I can’t get passed the pain. I’ve read the self-love tips and will put them into practice. Does anyone know of any actions I can do to stop torturing myself, I don’t want to go back but feel I’ll never find another relationship again and at 52, it’s quite daunting. Thank you