Better Self Image


Better Self Image


 

The Ups and Downs of Working on a Positive Self-Image: Feel Good About Yourself Naturally (Series 1 of 3)


Part One: Paradise Lost and Why Suffering is Inevitable


Feeling good about who you are is essential to a healthy and productive life. When you have a positive self-image, you are happier, and tend to be more creative. You feel more alive and connected to others. It can make all the difference in the world! Yet, by now you have experienced just how fragile your self-image can be if circumstances change in ways that do not support your desired sense of self. In spite of all your efforts over the years, stressful circumstances can trigger negative self-talk and judgments that leave you with little or no self-respect just when you need it the most.



It is easy and all too common to endlessly obsess over why a friend didn't include you as part of a dinner gathering or spin around in a vortex of self-criticism when a team member at work didn't like your project or feel profoundly inadequate because you did not follow through on an important goal you set for yourself. On the wrong day, even the slightest look or comment can be hurtful and leave you down on yourself.



Furthermore, the negative self-talk often has a desperate, urgent and compulsive quality. You "have to" know the reasons now why someone passed you over at work for a project, you "can't rest" until you know why a friend didn't return your call, or you "won't let it go" until you figure out why your meeting didn't work out the way you planned. You are anxious and tense until the answers are found and there is usually a heaviness to the whole matter that easily can slip into depression, irritability, frustration and obsession.



It is time to acknowledge and recognize a fact that becomes self-evident once brought into awareness: anyone who has a self-image by which they define who they are suffers. The enormous amounts of time and energy spent on self-improvement books, retreats, counseling and physical appearance attests to the extent of this type of suffering. The majority of marketing and advertising plays upon different aspects of this fact. The underlying message is that you will feel better about yourself if you buy this product or service. Given that a self-image is an endless project, you will tend to always be looking for the next break through and/or buying another product in hopes of some relief.



Why is suffering inevitable when you have self-image? Based on your past experience, it is probably clear that you cannot fundamentally change or create a new self-image for yourself, only grow out of it. But it is not because you haven't tried hard enough or because there is something wrong with you. It has to do with the nature of a "self-image".



First of all, a "self-image" needs to stabilize over time to become an enduring identity. Repeating patterns of behavior and thought while "working" on yourself to change what you don't like does this. It provides a sense of who you are and a purpose so you can go about the world with an orientation in mind. Who would you be and what would you be doing if you didn't have a self-image that needs continual maintaining and improving so that you can finally be your ideal image? You are working at cross-purposes without knowing it. This is because the deeper, unconscious need is to keep the unfinished self-image you have. When separated from your essence or Soul consciousness, your self-image is what you identify with and how you know yourself. Inevitably this ends up being frustrating which tends to result in more self-criticism and judgment.



Secondly, at the core of any self-image is a deep sense of inadequacy driven by a persistent fear. There is really no answer to this, only distraction from your disease: busyness, incessant thoughts, seeking, finding, acquiring, struggling, scarcity thinking, guilt and other symptoms of not being at peace with yourself. It's because a "self-image" was formed in reaction to inadequacy. The origins of "inadequacy" go back to childhood. Most basically, it has to do with the eroding away of Soul consciousness that inevitably occurs in a world where others have not yet remembered their Soul. A perceived loss of Oneness is felt followed by a core sense of inadequacy in reaction to feeling like you were abandoned. A self-image is created to protect against the further threat of abandonment stemming from the most significant separation that has already and ever will occur. The origin of all fear is the deeply held and largely unconscious pain of apparent abandonment from the source of all love. The repressed pain of a felt separation from Divine Love has never been resolved or in most cases, even raised as an issue. You have simply gone about living and engaging in your spiritual pursuits without ever having dealt with what it was like to lose the knowing of Oneness and your essential nature soon after you were born. Yet it is the greatest grief and source of all suffering that you have ever known. It was the "loss of Paradise". Nobody talks about this. Instead, the reaction to core separation was to get busy with creating a solid self-image that will protect you. It didn't work. Now there is an overlay of frustration on top of unhealed suffering.



Having and maintaining a positive self-image is not your true answer to feeling abandoned and unworthy of acceptance and love. The sooner this is recognized, the better the chance for real change. A self-image is just that, an image. It is not real nor is it your essence. There is no ground that it can rest on.



Failing at changing your self-image is meant to lead you out of your ego's separation and back to your Soul's wholeness. Real change is now possible. Given the failure, you are more willing to let go of your "game plan" and your control of your self-image. The ego part of you will still want to "make yourself" but now there is more space to return to Divine Source to know yourself and to face down the fear of being "made" by something beyond your mind's idea. It is the path to wholeness that is a return to what is more real than a self-image. This requires letting go of the project called "me" to experience the you that is Oneness. Even working on stopping the "negative self-talk" by learning to love yourself can be an obstruction if the goal is only to have a better self-image.



When blended with the life force of Soul, you can't dictate a course of change. You are moved in sometimes very unexpected but effortless ways. If you can allow this, you will notice something at hand that is greater than your self-improvement project. Simultaneously, you start to lose interest in your self-image. A "self-image" starts to be seen and appreciated as only a transitional stage in the maturation of consciousness. Like teddy bears or dolls that you were once so attached to for comfort, as you got older, you became more interested in what was more real and truly safe. This took place in a natural "growing out of" versus "thinking" it or "working" it through.





Jeffrey Douglass, MSW, CSW, author of Living From Your Soul, has been a licensed psychotherapist integrating psychology and spirituality for 33 years. Jeffery offers individual and couples counseling (also available by phone), as well as retreats, workplace coaching, and telecourses. To purchase the book, or for further information, please visit our website: www.livingfromyoursoul.com, email us at: jeffrey@livingfromyoursoul.com or call 208-667-8387.

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com


I think my MIL is telling my daughter that I am a pig.?
My daughter tells me that I am beautiful, pretty, cute, etc.. However, a couple of times lately she has been saying that I look like a pig! I am pretty sure my MIL put her up to it because she has indirectly said that she thinks I am. This woman has mentally and emotionally abused my husband to the point that he felt he was unworthy of a good life. She denied him entrance into the Honors program in high school.....she talked him out of going to college. You get the idea. When he and I got together, he was happier and had a better self-image within a month. He has really blossomed as a person, as a husband, a father and as a man. The only problem seems to be that his mother keeps trying to come between us by changing his view of me and our family unit. Dealing with her negativity is a constant battle. I am thinking of confronting the MIL about telling my child that I am a pig. I will start by asking her if she has called me a pig to my daughter. She will of course say no of course not. Which I intend to follow up with: Think what you want of me, but don't speak ill of me to MY child; that is crossing the line. What would you do? Yes, I would like to smack her, but please keep your answers legal.

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Awkward stage of puberty?
I'm 14... & going through a very awkward stage, physically & mentally. I'm so hormonal it's insane, I'm getting too many stretch marks, my chest looks weird, I've got fat in strange places on body, & my body just looks damn weird full stop. I've still got quite a lot of growing to do too... When will this stage pass?! I hate what I see in the mirror, I just want hurry up & get the body of my 18 year old self or whatever. Will my body always look this weird? I hate it. I also have very good self-image + confidence + esteem, as you can see. Thank you.

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What do you think of my thesis statement?
It's for my dance research essay on preventing eating disorders... Many modern day amateur and professional dancers suffer from eating disorders such as anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa that could be easily prevented by eating normally, recognizing the signs of the disorders before they occur, and creating a good self image of himself/herself. I think it might be a run on. It's only supposed to be one sentence! Can you fix it for me?

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