‘Sometimes when I am having a hard time mentally and emotionally, or sometimes even physically, I remind myself that I should take the compassion I show others and apply it to myself. Thinking about ways to quieten the negative inner voice, I tell myself that it’s OK to have bad days and that I wouldn’t be human if I didn’t experience a range of emotions. Also, it’s unrealistic to be happy all the time, so I give myself permission to feel those emotions, and think about remembering to be kind to myself. I learned this through Dr Russ Harris’s book, The Happiness Trap. Being able to be compassionate towards myself made such a difference to my life because it allowed me to understand and change my attitude and it gave my family breathing space, as now I usually just take myself off somewhere quiet in the house and just chill out. Everyone is far more relaxed because they don’t have to walk on eggshells around me anymore. I learned to be compassionate and empathetic to myself through trying different strategies. If one doesn’t work, try something different, but remember that you’re a human being and you deserve compassion, especially from yourself.’
‘I often will have a flashback to a particular thing that has shame attached to it. I have to actively remind myself to be compassionate for the person I was. But when this happens, I’m often not in the space to have self-compassion. I need to be traveling OK to do that and have a good headspace. So, instead, I might redirect my thinking by naming the thought “shame” and then let it go. Or I might do some grounding strategies, like say out loud or in my head my name, age and address, or literally say, “I’m not going to think about that right now.” But these are not good long-term strategies, they are more for the moment. If I’m in a good headspace, I’ll bring in compassion. I’ll accept the thought or memory and remind myself that I was a different person then, I have done a lot of work on myself and am in a better place. I might remind myself that I wasn’t well, I hadn’t healed then, and I was just trying to survive. And then I’ll think about now, what am I grateful for now – my home that I have made stable, the good relationships I have with my children, the peace that I am able to experience that I couldn’t before. This all came out of me going through some really tough things but making it through and coming out the other side.’
‘When things have gone wrong or I’ve felt embarrassed, or the shadow of the past has felt too much, it has helped me to get in touch with myself. To just be in the present and sit with myself, take notice and connect with myself. And to be grateful for what I have, but also grateful for my own agency and power and self-compassion. After a while, I learnt to talk to myself and be my own compassionate friend. If you can connect with yourself, it makes you more confident and able to follow your own path. It makes me more able to reach out, keep relationships and reconnect. It has a spin-off for the other types of connection. And it’s freeing. And free!’
This story and more like it can be found in Finding connection beyond family, friends and community.