
“Love yourself like your life depends on it. Because it does.” ~Danielle LaPorte
Thank you website impersonator. I appreciate you. In fact, you may be one of my best teachers.
Whoa. What?
Most people wouldn’t normally think of extending gratitude for someone who steals your words, impersonates your personal story, and uses your images online. Neither did I when I realized that an anonymous source had lifted not just my blog posts, but images of my daughter and specific characteristics of my life on their website.
Truth be told, I was outraged. This took intent. This took more than just a simple action of copying and pasting a few blog posts.
I’d only discovered this copycat website by chance. After a month of ignoring what I assumed were marketing emails from my website hosting company, I stopped long enough to pay attention.
Hadn’t I shut down this website a year ago? Indeed. I had allowed an old blog to go dark without ever realizing that the day after my site went offline, another was born—with not just the same URL, but an author who presented herself with my first name, my past career, and my medical history. The resemblance was remarkable.
Once the outrage simmered to a low boil, I went into action mode. Google and Facebook became my teachers for cease and desist language and the protocol for a digital takedown. But the more effort I put into wanting to “fight,” I also felt resistance.
Does it really matter? The pirated site was about to expire anyway—was this really what I wanted to put my energy into? Wouldn’t it take away from my real work? My soul’s purpose? I wondered if maybe this was an invitation to practice acceptance and compassion. Could I just let this go and release the grip on my story?
The more I struggled with how to feel and what to think, the more detached I became. The more others around me took up the fight, with rage-y anger and thoughts of legal action, the more I retreated into a chorus of “I don’t have the energy for this.”
It felt too overwhelming. Too daunting. Just too much.
I didn’t know much that day, but I knew I needed to get myself to a yin yoga class.
And then it hit me. Or rather, the importance of this lesson found me.
There I was, supporting myself with elbows pressing into my mat in sphinx pose. Our teacher invited us to allow our bellies to soften toward the earth. At once, it was as if all of the emotions that I’d been trying to resist were leaking out of me. I couldn’t have stopped the tears from flowing if I tried. Drip after drip, the feelings started to spill out. And as they did, I heard a voice from within.
It does matter. It is important. It is worth your energy. You do matter. You are important. You are worth your energy.
It wasn’t just about the website that used my first name and life story anymore. I started to feel the flashes of the past move through me.
The moment that I told myself that my (ex) fiancé cheating on me and leaving me right before my bone marrow transplant was okay because we’d been handed circumstances that we could never have envisioned at a young age.
The time that I divorced my first husband and made peace with meditation and his wishes because it would just be better for my young daughter if I made things easy.
Decades of never correcting people when they mispronounced my first name, because really….”I answer to anything.”
It was as if I was looking at the lifetime of “it doesn’t matter” moments in a mirror, each one, burying my own self-worth even deeper into the ground.
I matter.
These two simple words, layered with so much emotion, burst out of my heart through the tears.
Of all the moments in my life, it took a website impersonator to help me decide that I matter. That I am worth it.
Perhaps I hadn’t been ready before to find this sense of devotion to my worth. Perhaps the challenges and obstacles of my past were all part of the training that I needed to tend to my wholeness.
How many times had I relied on the theory that I should pick my battles? Not standing up for what was important because, in the big scheme of things, it wasn’t that big of a deal.
I’m a mom of a teenager, so picking my battles is par for the course. And I believe that there are, indeed, something things that are better released than forced. But at what point does each decision actually chip away at our own self-worth? How can we be compassionate and empathetic beings while still honoring our worthiness and value?
At what point do we decide that our hearts are sacred altars that need tending?
The good news is that a simple and not very legal sounding email did the trick to entice the anonymous website owner to take down images and stories that were mine. And I’m thankful for that. But I’m even more grateful for this gut-punching nudge because the days of self-deprecating not-a-big-deal moments are over. They have to be.
So many of us wrangle with the beast of mattering and worthiness. I’d even believed that I’d tamed it in the past, but in fact, the thread of stories of making things easier for others or feeling like it would be better to blend into the background was sturdier than I thought.
It is in these moments of challenge or contrast that we have a choice. To stand up for our self-worth. For our voices. For our stories. To make the decision to finally stand tall in the belief that we matter.
While picking and choosing our battles might be a powerful parenting tool, we have every right to speak up when someone disrespects us, disregards our needs, or minimizes our feelings. It does matter. And it’s not being oversensitive, rude, or dramatic.
Every time we speak up and recognize that we are honoring our inner value, we reinforce to ourselves that our feelings and needs are important—that we are important, just as important as anyone else.
When we believe this, we act like it. We take better care of ourselves. We set healthy boundaries. We listen to the little voice inside that tells us when something isn’t right for us. And we allow ourselves the space to pursue our dreams and reach our potential, which enables us to make a positive difference in the world. The flip side is true as well. The more we act like we matter, the more we believe it.
It all starts with saying, “Yes, I do matter.” Now, I know I do. Do you?
About Elena Sonnino
Elena Sonnino is a life coach and speaker. She guides women who struggle with not-enoughness to see themselves with curiosity, vulnerability, and self-love. Her superpower is to be the mirror that helps you tap into your inner guidance and light up your own world. Learn more about Elena’s work and download a free guided meditation to tend to your inner garden.
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Though I run this site, it is not mine. It's ours. It's not about me. It's about us. Your stories and your wisdom are just as meaningful as mine.
I loved this Elena. It was so powerful. And yes, I do. I took two minutes to stand with my hands on my hips and feel it. Love this and love you!
First time I have ever left a comment. I am for economic reasons in a retirement home
where most resident are 20+ years older. Two women are without doubt controlling and I am strident by nature. I so strive to make things better in same way. Totalling unappreciated and often put down… This weekend gardening (I am good at it) was wearing a dress and showing a little cleavage – a complaint to residents committee ‘a low life reckoned
he felt like catapulting my boobs’ and that I should cover up in future! I wear two sport bras that total cover my boobs! The wife of this couple often nods disapproving at by good attempts. I put her straight this weekend – I am not supported by others – they are all waiting
in gods lounge. It’s so takes you down value wise. I have also experienced sexual harassment from another neighbour over a period of 18 months (which the police intervened
and cautioned him. IT SO UNRELENTING – Although only 64 I can’t see a way out financially.
Bravo! Yes! I love this and I soooo needed to read this today. By the way, I completely relate to having people mispronounce your name and you don’t correct them. I’m a Johanna but I respond to Joanne, Joanna, whatever. I too, realized at some point that this was indicative of my nature to deny my self-worth.
“How can we be compassionate and empathetic beings while still honoring our worthiness and value?”
I struggle with this balance every day. It is frustrating that what I consider to be my biggest strengths are also undermining me personally and professionally. I try to remind myself that while everyone has their own personal struggles that may impact how they respond to me, that is no excuse for me to put up with bad behaviour from others. I’m learning about my boundaries and enforcing them daily.
Thank you so much for this. It was just what I needed to hear; it made me real how, several years ago, when I began practicing zen/buddhism, I made the decision to accept a lot of things from others that I hadn’t before, in an attempt to choose my battles and accept what I couldn’t change. However, my self-respect has definitely taken a nosedive. The last few years have been filled with boundary violations which I let slide, more and more. Lately, I have had to stop and consider re-setting boundaries in a huge way. Your article made me stop and see how at one point, I told myself that these little things others do, don’t matter to my inner soul. However, they do matter! They have mattered. They have chipped away at my self-protection. For a while it was utopian to think I didn’t have to stick up for myself against external forces in order to respect myself. But the harder truth, is that we do have to expend some energy outward to stick up for ourselves. I’m making a new commitment to myself today 🙂 Again, thank you.
What a beautiful, wise, and timely message. Thank you!
I’ve decided to save and read this once a day for a while until I internalize it. I talked it over with my therapist with tearful recognition that maybe “I’m not there yet” with “yet” being the important word. Good news: yesterday I tended to my needs by being (gently but firmly) assertive with two situations: I needed the landscaper to remove a mess he left last fall and I needed my boyfriend to help me move a heavy mirror. Both things happened yesterday and the earth did not shatter just because I asked. Small steps but I’m not giving up on this. Thank you for you beautiful story that reached me in a way that has been needed and wanted. Almost nobody spells or pronounces my name correctly without me forcing it. I’m Jettie.
Wow! This really hit home for me too. First because my website was stolen and impersonated TWICE. And mostly because I can identify with this pattern of “I don’t really matter”, and even trying my best not to take up too much space on the planet or get in anyone’s way. I’ve been slowly healing that pattern, but it is a work in progress. Thanks for sharing your story Elena!
Thank you SO much for sharing your story Jackie! Wishing you continued support as you navigate finding your strength amidst the circumstances.
Boundaries are so important Valentina…and also so very hard to maintain. Wishing you ease as you continue to practice.
Thank you Steph! I am so glad this resonated with you and you took the time to embody your worthiness in your own body!
I am so glad that this resonated Hanna – and yes, isn’t it interesting how seemingly little things are actually so powerful?
Thanks Elena, I really needed to hear this. I have recently ended my relationship with my family after years of being bullied and verbally and emotionally abused. It’s been a long, slow process of disentangling myself from them, but things finally came to a head this past weekend. No longer will I feel like I don’t matter anymore. No longer will I let people mispronounce my name anymore (so annoying). And no longer will I keep quiet about it. I’ve stopped caring what people think about me and I’ve decided to stand up for myself and speak out. Thank you for your empowering words. Here’s to a new life of self worth 🙂
I can identify Meagan. There is no value in clinging to thwarted relationships.