Working with the pressures we put on ourselves to "perform", to be what we "should" be, to do things the way they're "supposed" to be done, even when trying to do these things creates enormous personal and interpersonal distress, presents some challenges. One of the most considerable of these challenges has to do with recognizing the larger cultural context within which pressures like these arise. In other words, this sort of distress isn't just "something wrong with me". It is also, and in a sense primarily, "something wrong with our culture", which then becomes one's personal story as well.
"If I could just muster enough self discipline to _________________", fill in your own blanks:
work a job, go to school, manage a household, shop, clean, study, socialize, pay bills, excel, take care of the kids, exercise, eat right, be sensitive to everyone else's needs................................
And when I fall short of these ridiculously and unrealistically high expectations, I manage quite well to feel terrible about myself. I'm not strong enough. I'm weak. I'm not smart enough. I'm not creative enough. I'm just basically no good. I'm certain many of you can relate easily with these feelings, and the mental messages that go along with them.
Here's an alternative strategy, which on the face of it might seem simplistic, or obvious: practice relating with yourself more kindly; more gently; more forgivingly; more realistically. I know, easier said than done. Of course. That's why I said "practice". Like the development of any skill, relationship skills - including the relationship with ourselves - require practice and cultivation. Some consistency, rather than a great, forceful push of intensity. Think in the long term: gradual, slow development over time.
I know this goes against virtually everything the larger culture presents to us. I know this is opposite to the "quick fix" mentality and set of expectations we're "supposed to" live by (even while great lip service is paid to the other, more "virtuous", more "wise", and indeed more realistic values of gradual progress). I recognize the contradictions, and I hope you will too, because recognizing them will play an important role in your being able to learn how to care for yourself in opposition to them, and to their representative voices in your head.
If you can't have your optimal set of circumstances, for whatever reasons, allow yourself to utilize smaller aspects of the things, people, and conditions that do in fact work for your benefit. Example: you'd really love to be living in a more natural, nature based environment, but currently this isn't possible because your needs - things that you've freely chosen, let's say - require you to be in the city, or in town. Not only that, but your current financial circumstances require you to live in a low-income part of town, which among other things, means that it isn't necessarily very safe, so you're afraid to go out and walk in your neighborhood.
OK. What can you do that might actually be helpful, healing, nurturing for yourself, within these constraints? Instead of concluding that there's nothing that you can do, how about implementing the above "smaller aspects" strategy? Can you create, inside your space, an environment that is composed of natural elements? Can you drive to a part of town, or even a ways out of town, to an area where you can feel safe walking in Nature? Can you have people whom you feel some closeness with into your space? In other words, try not to get caught in an "all or nothing" condition, where you become paralized by the sense of seeing only what you don't have, and nothing of what you might be able to have that would help.
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