| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
experiencelifemag.com
Print › | Back ›
Take Care of Yourself
Overcoming barriers to self-care can be difficult, especially for women. But making time and space for ourselves - and getting over any residual emotional guilt - is critical to our well-being and happiness. In the long run, it’s better for those around us, too.
By Courtney E. Martin |
January-February 2008 |
Assessing the Costs
Time For a Change
Self-Care Reconsidered
Resources
For most of us, the concept of self-care is
lost amid clamoring cell phones, hungry kids, impatient bosses and a 24/7 news
cycle that’s continuously bombarding us with big things to worry about. We rank
just about everything — work, kids, friends, aging parents, ever-looming crises
— above our own fundamental need for things like rest, quiet, exercise and
pleasure. Something always seems more important.
Women are especially
accustomed to pushing their self-care further and further down the to-do list.
We’ve been socialized to care for others and taught that self-sacrifice is
inextricably linked with motherhood and wifedom. We fear being labeled
“selfish” for insisting on monthly massages or “lazy” for taking a midday nap.
“For me, the hardest thing is to say no to my kids, and to claim time and
space for myself when they want me,” says Heather Hewett, PhD, a women’s studies
professor at the State University of New York at New Paltz and mother of two
small children. “I have to tell myself, consciously, that they will be OK. Where
does all this guilt come from?”
Pamela Peeke, MD, MPH, and author of Fit to
Live (Rodale, 2007), thinks it’s biological: “Women are hardwired to care about
anything that comes within 100 feet of them, but they have to realize that the
best caregiver is a healthy caregiver.”
Assessing the Costs Ignoring our own needs while constantly
meeting the needs of others can have serious physical, emotional and even
spiritual ramifications. For example, scientific studies regularly confirm that
stress — the condition self-care can help alleviate — heightens a person’s risks
of cardiovascular disease and some cancers. Christiane Northrup, MD, author of
Women’s Bodies, Women’s Wisdom: Creating Physical and Emotional Health and
Healing (Bantam, 2006), attests that cellular inflammation — a byproduct of
stress, among other things — is the origin of all chronic disease. The
hormone cortisol also builds up in the stressed system and gradually erodes
it — causing our organs to malfunction, our muscles to lose suppleness, our
immune systems to break down, and both our bodies and our brains to age faster.
Those who don’t take the time to exercise regularly or eat healthy, balanced
meals further increase their chances of incurring chronic health problems,
including diabetes. And women more often suffer from immune illnesses like
chronic fatigue syndrome and thyroid disorders, ailments that experts believe
are often caused — at least in part — by a frenzied and health-compromising
lifestyle. Emotionally, a lack of self-care can leave us anxious, depressed
and less productive (the ultimate irony, of course, since we often avoid
self-care in pursuit of accomplishing more).
Though we often postpone
self-care to better serve those we love — taking that bath can seem petty when
your kids need help with their homework — forgoing our own needs actually
damages those relationships in the long run. It can lead to bitterness,
exhaustion, and even resentment. Women too harried to take care of themselves
often have a harder time being receptive and compassionate with their partners,
too. Studies confirm that those who have consistent self-care routines are
markedly happier in their marriages.
Beyond the damages that we suffer
personally when we neglect our own needs, there are some troubling sociological
ramifications associated with all this “toughing it out.” We superwomen are
raising a generation of supergirls.
Though few mothers explicitly tell their
daughters to sacrifice their own needs and instead focus on the needs of others
and “achieve, achieve, achieve,” the models they set with their own busy lives
speak volumes.
How often, by contrast, do we model the subtle art of putting
our own essential needs and self-care first? ˙
“Many of us saw our moms slip
into second place, so we easily fall into the same pattern,” explains Wendy
Shanker, author of The Fat Girl’s Guide to Life (Bloomsbury, 2004). “We take a
sort of pride in our martyrdom: I couldn’t exercise because I had to stay late
at work. I couldn’t meet up with my friends because my kids would freak out if I
left the house. Shockingly, you discover that you don’t get rewarded for your
selflessness, so you get resentful. You get used to the resentment. Then you
gotta make someone pay for all that sacrifice, and it’s often your daughter. The
cycle continues.”
Our lack of self-care is a dangerous legacy likely to
be passed on to the next generation of female leaders. Results of an October
2006 report published by Girls Inc., The Supergirl Dilemma: Girls Grapple With
the Mounting Pressure of Expectation, revealed that 74 percent of girls in
grades 9 through 12 reported feeling stressed. The next generation may have
access to more opportunities than their mothers or grandmothers, but they aren’t
likely to know much more about protecting their own physical and mental health
while pursuing their dreams.
There are also profound spiritual losses when
we submerge our own needs and desires and let everyone else’s expectations float
to the surface. Anna Quindlen describes it well in her book Being Perfect
(Random House, 2005): “Someday, sometime, you will be sitting somewhere.... And
something bad will have happened: You will have lost someone you loved, or
failed at something at which you badly wanted to succeed. And sitting there, you
will fall into the center of yourself. You will look for some core to sustain
you. And if you have been perfect all your life and have managed to meet all the
expectations of your family, your friends, your community, your society, chances
are excellent that there will be a black hole where that core ought to
be.”
Simply put, self-care is about feeding the very center of yourself. It’s
about valuing the needs and desires that emerge from your body’s wisdom. It’s
about believing that you can’t do the work you need to do in the world —
including taking care of others — without first doing the hard work of taking
care of yourself.
Time For a Change But what does all this mean in practical terms? How
do you limit your caretaking of others and start prioritizing at least some of
your own needs? Here are a few simple steps for putting yourself first.
Discover Your Own Self-Care Style The first step involves defining what
self-care means to you. For Betsy Henning, cofounder of Alling Henning
Associates (a.k.a. AHA!), a Vancouver, Wash.–based creative business-writing
agency, it’s about solitude and silence. “I probably ‘do’ self-care, although I
would never think of it that way, by getting up early,” she says. “The mornings
became ‘my time.’ I enjoy the quiet — I never turn on music or the TV. I read. I
sit on the deck. I talk to the dogs. I write letters and emails. I find my
camera and take weird, spontaneous photos. I love my family, but I have a
visceral response to hearing the first of the three doors open and a bathroom
door shut. Those are the sounds that let me know ‘my time’ is up.”
For
Hewett, it’s less about being alone and more about being in touch with her own
body. “I keep an exercise journal, which makes me focus on my body,” she says.
“Also, I love yoga, which teaches one to be self-aware and mindful of one’s
physical and emotional state. I have found this invaluable.”
Self-care also
means abandoning the idea that there is an authority that knows more about what
your body needs than you. “The lack of self-care all comes from the belief that
you don’t know what’s best for you,” says Northrup. “So, in our culture,
self-care becomes going to the doctor. How can we continue to believe that some
expert outside of ourselves knows how to take better care of ourselves then we
do?” Make Some Changes Once you know your self-care style, how do you get over
the sometimes-debilitating logistical hump of actually following
through?
Peeke believes that big changes only come through baby steps. “If
you never have breakfast, then today is the day,” she says. “You can learn about
quality and quantity later, but the first step is to have the darn
thing.”
Sometimes getting what you need means just taking a few minutes
during your hectic day to be quiet, says Karol Ward, LCSW, a psychotherapist and
executive presentation coach in New York City. “I once coached a woman in a
corporate environment — getting her to where she could finally shut her
office door for 20 minutes a day,” she says. “This version of self-care helped
her realize that not shutting her door was leading to some self-destructive
behavior, such as drinking way too much coffee and always being available to
everyone else at the cost of her own need to get things done. Shutting her door
allowed her to catch up on her own work, call her children and/or husband, or
simply look out the window for peace of mind.”
Some experts recommend taking
mini-retreats, such as one day a month when you get to take care of yourself,
and eventually working yourself up to longer retreats at a spa or exotic locale
where you can immerse yourself in peace and quiet.
These and other self-care
activities may need to become a fundamental part of your planning strategy each
week. As you pencil in the soccer games on the family calendar or the
networking lunches in your own planner, take a nonerasable pen and carve out
some nonnegotiable time preordained as “self-care.” If that means asking a
partner for help, ask. If it means setting limits on how much you can do for
others, set limits. See the Bigger Picture One important way to overcome the guilt that comes
with prioritizing self-care is to understand how it will contribute to the
greater good. As Northrup explains, “You cannot give real nurturance to another
from an empty cup.”
Another key, says Shanker, is to free yourself from the
expectations of perfection. That will allow more time for self-care and the
enjoyment of the accomplishment you have already created. “Your house doesn’t
have to be spotless. Your body doesn’t have to be fat-free. Your desk
doesn’t have to be organized. Make room for mistakes. Give in to a certain
amount of chaos. If you stop setting yourself up for failure, you give yourself
a gift: success.”
Perfectionism can be a coping mechanism, a way for women to
feel safe and in control of their environment, explains Ward. But by paying more
attention to their own self-care, women can often release that need for
control.
“When women start practicing modes of self-care, they are able to
relax more and tap into a ‘good enough’ mentality,” she says. “Being in charge
of one’s life becomes more a ‘feeling’ state of mind rather than a ‘doing’ state
of mind.”
Listen to Your Emotions Feelings aren’t just the stuff of sentimental
songs; they’re the lifeblood of our physiological existence. It takes acute
self-awareness to know what your body, in particular, needs and when it needs
it. “Self-awareness — the ability to recognize, understand and label
one’s own feelings, along with the ability to accurately self-assess — is a
foundational skill for a life of well-being,” explains psychotherapist Robin
Stern, PhD, an expert on emotional intelligence and author of The Gaslight
Effect: How to Spot and Survive the Hidden Manipulation Others Use to Control
Your Life (Broadway Books, 2007). “But so many of us are racing through our
lives without taking the time to stop and take a breath and just be.”
Stern
recommends scheduling regular time for reflective activity, like journaling and
meditating, and setting aside brief moments of silence throughout the day to
simply check in with yourself: What am I feeling right now? How strong is that
feeling? Where do I feel it? What do I understand or know about that feeling?
She suggests “turning down the volume” of your daily life — by spending time
alone, by escaping from the dull roar of media and conversations and other
requests for attention — so that you can listen more acutely to your authentic
inner voice. “That, in itself, is a loving act of self-care,” she explains. Learn the Magic Word Acquiring and trusting this deeper sense of
self-awareness can help you learn to say that most-difficult of words:
no. Not in your vocabulary, you say? You’re not alone. “It’s
often hard for women who aren’t used to saying no to jump right in and say it,”
Ward notes. “Instead, try phrases such as, ‘I need to look at my schedule and
get back to you,’ or, ‘That sounds like a worthwhile idea or project; I’m just
not certain whether it’s something I can commit to right now.’”
Before
offering a firm response, sit down and check in with your body. How does your
body feel when you imagine doing what you’ve been asked to do? Do you feel tense
and weighted down, or excited and energized?
You may find it helpful
to express your genuine feelings about your decision to say no, says Ward. She
recommends phrases like, “It’s hard for me to say no, but I have to at this
time,” or, “I know it’s a worthwhile cause, but I am overextended right now.” Or
simply: “Unfortunately, that doesn’t work for me.”
Whatever your strategy for
improving the way you care for your body, mind and spirit, try to take some
small steps in that direction every day. How you go about improving the quality
and quantity of care you give yourself is, as Northrup explains, completely up
to you.
“Ultimately, self-care is about understanding that your body is the
one place on the planet that you have dominion over,” she says. “You are nature.
Your body is what you’re given as your little piece of the earth to take care
of. No one else can do it for you.”
Courtney E. Martin is a New York–based
writer.
Self-Care Reconsidered Wondering if you’re doing a decent job of taking care of yourself — or how
your self-care strategies could be improved? Review the following questions, and
reflect on your answers. Chances are you’re struggling in at least a few of the
realms where self-care is most important: a balanced diet, exercise, solitude
and reflection. Healthy Eating
- How often do you
finish a meal feeling like it was both healthy and satisfying — and that you
actually tasted it?
- Do you focus more on what your partner or your kids
are eating than what you eat?
- How often do you have time to revel in
and appreciate the aesthetic and sensory pleasures of your meals?
- How
often do you sit down with family or friends around the kitchen table and have a
leisurely meal?
- How often do you get to use whole, healthy foods in
your food preparation instead of prepackaged meals or snacks?
- How often
do you skip meals because you don’t feel like you have time to
eat?
Healthy Body
- Do you struggle to find time for
exercise? Sleep? Outdoor time? How often do you stretch?
- When was
the last time you had a massage or took a long bath?
- What kind of
movement makes you truly happy? How regularly do you do it?
- Do you
feel in touch with your own sexuality?
- How much time do you spend
sitting in front of a computer every day? Do you get up and take
breaks?
Healthy Spirit
- Do you often find yourself saying yes when you’d
like to say no?
- When was the last time you were alone for an
extended period of time without being “productive” (catching up on work,
cleaning the house, etc.)?
- What solitary activity gives you the most
pleasure in life? How often do you get to participate in that
activity?
- How often do you ask for support from friends, family, your
partner or spouse?
- How often do you feel overwhelmed?
- When do
you feel most at peace? How can you be there, doing that, more of the
time?
Resources BOOKS Self-Nurture: Learning to Care for Yourself As Effectively As You Care
for Everyone Else by Alice D. Domar, PhD, and Henry Dreher (Penguin,
2001) Woman’s Comfort Book: A Self-Nurturing Guide for Restoring Balance in
Your Life by Jennifer Louden (HarperOne, 2005) Self-Care Cards by Cheryl
Richardson (Hay House, 2001)
WEB www.comfortqueen.com — Jennifer Louden’s
work-life balance site for women.
www.soulfulliving.com — Resources for
personal and spiritual growth, including a Daily Soul Retreat newsletter.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Take Care of Yourself
Overcoming barriers to self-care can be difficult, especially for women. But making time and space for ourselves - and getting over any residual emotional guilt - is critical to our well-being and happiness. In the long run, it’s better for those around us, too.
By Courtney E. Martin | Features, January-February 2008 |
Assessing the Costs
Time For a Change
Self-Care Reconsidered
Resources
For most of us, the concept of self-care is
lost amid clamoring cell phones, hungry kids, impatient bosses and a 24/7 news
cycle that’s continuously bombarding us with big things to worry about. We rank
just about everything — work, kids, friends, aging parents, ever-looming crises
— above our own fundamental need for things like rest, quiet, exercise and
pleasure. Something always seems more important.
Women are especially
accustomed to pushing their self-care further and further down the to-do list.
We’ve been socialized to care for others and taught that self-sacrifice is
inextricably linked with motherhood and wifedom. We fear being labeled
“selfish” for insisting on monthly massages or “lazy” for taking a midday nap.
“For me, the hardest thing is to say no to my kids, and to claim time and
space for myself when they want me,” says Heather Hewett, PhD, a women’s studies
professor at the State University of New York at New Paltz and mother of two
small children. “I have to tell myself, consciously, that they will be OK. Where
does all this guilt come from?”
Pamela Peeke, MD, MPH, and author of Fit to
Live (Rodale, 2007), thinks it’s biological: “Women are hardwired to care about
anything that comes within 100 feet of them, but they have to realize that the
best caregiver is a healthy caregiver.”
Assessing the Costs (Back to Top) Ignoring our own needs while constantly
meeting the needs of others can have serious physical, emotional and even
spiritual ramifications. For example, scientific studies regularly confirm that
stress — the condition self-care can help alleviate — heightens a person’s risks
of cardiovascular disease and some cancers. Christiane Northrup, MD, author of
Women’s Bodies, Women’s Wisdom: Creating Physical and Emotional Health and
Healing (Bantam, 2006), attests that cellular inflammation — a byproduct of
stress, among other things — is the origin of all chronic disease. The
hormone cortisol also builds up in the stressed system and gradually erodes
it — causing our organs to malfunction, our muscles to lose suppleness, our
immune systems to break down, and both our bodies and our brains to age faster.
Those who don’t take the time to exercise regularly or eat healthy, balanced
meals further increase their chances of incurring chronic health problems,
including diabetes. And women more often suffer from immune illnesses like
chronic fatigue syndrome and thyroid disorders, ailments that experts believe
are often caused — at least in part — by a frenzied and health-compromising
lifestyle. Emotionally, a lack of self-care can leave us anxious, depressed
and less productive (the ultimate irony, of course, since we often avoid
self-care in pursuit of accomplishing more).
Though we often postpone
self-care to better serve those we love — taking that bath can seem petty when
your kids need help with their homework — forgoing our own needs actually
damages those relationships in the long run. It can lead to bitterness,
exhaustion, and even resentment. Women too harried to take care of themselves
often have a harder time being receptive and compassionate with their partners,
too. Studies confirm that those who have consistent self-care routines are
markedly happier in their marriages.
Beyond the damages that we suffer
personally when we neglect our own needs, there are some troubling sociological
ramifications associated with all this “toughing it out.” We superwomen are
raising a generation of supergirls.
Though few mothers explicitly tell their
daughters to sacrifice their own needs and instead focus on the needs of others
and “achieve, achieve, achieve,” the models they set with their own busy lives
speak volumes.
How often, by contrast, do we model the subtle art of putting
our own essential needs and self-care first? ˙
“Many of us saw our moms slip
into second place, so we easily fall into the same pattern,” explains Wendy
Shanker, author of The Fat Girl’s Guide to Life (Bloomsbury, 2004). “We take a
sort of pride in our martyrdom: I couldn’t exercise because I had to stay late
at work. I couldn’t meet up with my friends because my kids would freak out if I
left the house. Shockingly, you discover that you don’t get rewarded for your
selflessness, so you get resentful. You get used to the resentment. Then you
gotta make someone pay for all that sacrifice, and it’s often your daughter. The
cycle continues.”
Our lack of self-care is a dangerous legacy likely to
be passed on to the next generation of female leaders. Results of an October
2006 report published by Girls Inc., The Supergirl Dilemma: Girls Grapple With
the Mounting Pressure of Expectation, revealed that 74 percent of girls in
grades 9 through 12 reported feeling stressed. The next generation may have
access to more opportunities than their mothers or grandmothers, but they aren’t
likely to know much more about protecting their own physical and mental health
while pursuing their dreams.
There are also profound spiritual losses when
we submerge our own needs and desires and let everyone else’s expectations float
to the surface. Anna Quindlen describes it well in her book Being Perfect
(Random House, 2005): “Someday, sometime, you will be sitting somewhere.... And
something bad will have happened: You will have lost someone you loved, or
failed at something at which you badly wanted to succeed. And sitting there, you
will fall into the center of yourself. You will look for some core to sustain
you. And if you have been perfect all your life and have managed to meet all the
expectations of your family, your friends, your community, your society, chances
are excellent that there will be a black hole where that core ought to
be.”
Simply put, self-care is about feeding the very center of yourself. It’s
about valuing the needs and desires that emerge from your body’s wisdom. It’s
about believing that you can’t do the work you need to do in the world —
including taking care of others — without first doing the hard work of taking
care of yourself.
Time For a Change (Back to Top) But what does all this mean in practical terms? How
do you limit your caretaking of others and start prioritizing at least some of
your own needs? Here are a few simple steps for putting yourself first.
Discover Your Own Self-Care Style The first step involves defining what
self-care means to you. For Betsy Henning, cofounder of Alling Henning
Associates (a.k.a. AHA!), a Vancouver, Wash.–based creative business-writing
agency, it’s about solitude and silence. “I probably ‘do’ self-care, although I
would never think of it that way, by getting up early,” she says. “The mornings
became ‘my time.’ I enjoy the quiet — I never turn on music or the TV. I read. I
sit on the deck. I talk to the dogs. I write letters and emails. I find my
camera and take weird, spontaneous photos. I love my family, but I have a
visceral response to hearing the first of the three doors open and a bathroom
door shut. Those are the sounds that let me know ‘my time’ is up.”
For
Hewett, it’s less about being alone and more about being in touch with her own
body. “I keep an exercise journal, which makes me focus on my body,” she says.
“Also, I love yoga, which teaches one to be self-aware and mindful of one’s
physical and emotional state. I have found this invaluable.”
Self-care also
means abandoning the idea that there is an authority that knows more about what
your body needs than you. “The lack of self-care all comes from the belief that
you don’t know what’s best for you,” says Northrup. “So, in our culture,
self-care becomes going to the doctor. How can we continue to believe that some
expert outside of ourselves knows how to take better care of ourselves then we
do?” Make Some Changes Once you know your self-care style, how do you get over
the sometimes-debilitating logistical hump of actually following
through?
Peeke believes that big changes only come through baby steps. “If
you never have breakfast, then today is the day,” she says. “You can learn about
quality and quantity later, but the first step is to have the darn
thing.”
Sometimes getting what you need means just taking a few minutes
during your hectic day to be quiet, says Karol Ward, LCSW, a psychotherapist and
executive presentation coach in New York City. “I once coached a woman in a
corporate environment — getting her to where she could finally shut her
office door for 20 minutes a day,” she says. “This version of self-care helped
her realize that not shutting her door was leading to some self-destructive
behavior, such as drinking way too much coffee and always being available to
everyone else at the cost of her own need to get things done. Shutting her door
allowed her to catch up on her own work, call her children and/or husband, or
simply look out the window for peace of mind.”
Some experts recommend taking
mini-retreats, such as one day a month when you get to take care of yourself,
and eventually working yourself up to longer retreats at a spa or exotic locale
where you can immerse yourself in peace and quiet.
These and other self-care
activities may need to become a fundamental part of your planning strategy each
week. As you pencil in the soccer games on the family calendar or the
networking lunches in your own planner, take a nonerasable pen and carve out
some nonnegotiable time preordained as “self-care.” If that means asking a
partner for help, ask. If it means setting limits on how much you can do for
others, set limits. See the Bigger Picture One important way to overcome the guilt that comes
with prioritizing self-care is to understand how it will contribute to the
greater good. As Northrup explains, “You cannot give real nurturance to another
from an empty cup.”
Another key, says Shanker, is to free yourself from the
expectations of perfection. That will allow more time for self-care and the
enjoyment of the accomplishment you have already created. “Your house doesn’t
have to be spotless. Your body doesn’t have to be fat-free. Your desk
doesn’t have to be organized. Make room for mistakes. Give in to a certain
amount of chaos. If you stop setting yourself up for failure, you give yourself
a gift: success.”
Perfectionism can be a coping mechanism, a way for women to
feel safe and in control of their environment, explains Ward. But by paying more
attention to their own self-care, women can often release that need for
control.
“When women start practicing modes of self-care, they are able to
relax more and tap into a ‘good enough’ mentality,” she says. “Being in charge
of one’s life becomes more a ‘feeling’ state of mind rather than a ‘doing’ state
of mind.”
Listen to Your Emotions Feelings aren’t just the stuff of sentimental
songs; they’re the lifeblood of our physiological existence. It takes acute
self-awareness to know what your body, in particular, needs and when it needs
it. “Self-awareness — the ability to recognize, understand and label
one’s own feelings, along with the ability to accurately self-assess — is a
foundational skill for a life of well-being,” explains psychotherapist Robin
Stern, PhD, an expert on emotional intelligence and author of The Gaslight
Effect: How to Spot and Survive the Hidden Manipulation Others Use to Control
Your Life (Broadway Books, 2007). “But so many of us are racing through our
lives without taking the time to stop and take a breath and just be.”
Stern
recommends scheduling regular time for reflective activity, like journaling and
meditating, and setting aside brief moments of silence throughout the day to
simply check in with yourself: What am I feeling right now? How strong is that
feeling? Where do I feel it? What do I understand or know about that feeling?
She suggests “turning down the volume” of your daily life — by spending time
alone, by escaping from the dull roar of media and conversations and other
requests for attention — so that you can listen more acutely to your authentic
inner voice. “That, in itself, is a loving act of self-care,” she explains. Learn the Magic Word Acquiring and trusting this deeper sense of
self-awareness can help you learn to say that most-difficult of words:
no. Not in your vocabulary, you say? You’re not alone. “It’s
often hard for women who aren’t used to saying no to jump right in and say it,”
Ward notes. “Instead, try phrases such as, ‘I need to look at my schedule and
get back to you,’ or, ‘That sounds like a worthwhile idea or project; I’m just
not certain whether it’s something I can commit to right now.’”
Before
offering a firm response, sit down and check in with your body. How does your
body feel when you imagine doing what you’ve been asked to do? Do you feel tense
and weighted down, or excited and energized?
You may find it helpful
to express your genuine feelings about your decision to say no, says Ward. She
recommends phrases like, “It’s hard for me to say no, but I have to at this
time,” or, “I know it’s a worthwhile cause, but I am overextended right now.” Or
simply: “Unfortunately, that doesn’t work for me.”
Whatever your strategy for
improving the way you care for your body, mind and spirit, try to take some
small steps in that direction every day. How you go about improving the quality
and quantity of care you give yourself is, as Northrup explains, completely up
to you.
“Ultimately, self-care is about understanding that your body is the
one place on the planet that you have dominion over,” she says. “You are nature.
Your body is what you’re given as your little piece of the earth to take care
of. No one else can do it for you.”
Courtney E. Martin is a New York–based
writer.
Self-Care Reconsidered (Back to Top) Wondering if you’re doing a decent job of taking care of yourself — or how
your self-care strategies could be improved? Review the following questions, and
reflect on your answers. Chances are you’re struggling in at least a few of the
realms where self-care is most important: a balanced diet, exercise, solitude
and reflection. Healthy Eating
- How often do you
finish a meal feeling like it was both healthy and satisfying — and that you
actually tasted it?
- Do you focus more on what your partner or your kids
are eating than what you eat?
- How often do you have time to revel in
and appreciate the aesthetic and sensory pleasures of your meals?
- How
often do you sit down with family or friends around the kitchen table and have a
leisurely meal?
- How often do you get to use whole, healthy foods in
your food preparation instead of prepackaged meals or snacks?
- How often
do you skip meals because you don’t feel like you have time to
eat?
Healthy Body
- Do you struggle to find time for
exercise? Sleep? Outdoor time? How often do you stretch?
- When was
the last time you had a massage or took a long bath?
- What kind of
movement makes you truly happy? How regularly do you do it?
- Do you
feel in touch with your own sexuality?
- How much time do you spend
sitting in front of a computer every day? Do you get up and take
breaks?
Healthy Spirit
- Do you often find yourself saying yes when you’d
like to say no?
- When was the last time you were alone for an
extended period of time without being “productive” (catching up on work,
cleaning the house, etc.)?
- What solitary activity gives you the most
pleasure in life? How often do you get to participate in that
activity?
- How often do you ask for support from friends, family, your
partner or spouse?
- How often do you feel overwhelmed?
- When do
you feel most at peace? How can you be there, doing that, more of the
time?
Resources (Back to Top) BOOKS Self-Nurture: Learning to Care for Yourself As Effectively As You Care
for Everyone Else by Alice D. Domar, PhD, and Henry Dreher (Penguin,
2001) Woman’s Comfort Book: A Self-Nurturing Guide for Restoring Balance in
Your Life by Jennifer Louden (HarperOne, 2005) Self-Care Cards by Cheryl
Richardson (Hay House, 2001)
WEB www.comfortqueen.com — Jennifer Louden’s
work-life balance site for women.
www.soulfulliving.com — Resources for
personal and spiritual growth, including a Daily Soul Retreat newsletter.
Print | Share
| Comment
| Read Comments
|
|
January 3, 2008
Leslie says:
You need to take care of YOU. If you don't take care of YOU, you may not be around to take care of others. This article sums up what I have been telling myself for years. I have only recently (in the last few months) turned my life around for me.
January 1, 2008
Glynnis Lessing says:
This is a much needed article at a key time. Your magazine is SO great. Always just the right topic at just the right time. I feel so cared for! Thank you!