This doesn’t cut it.
I have a picture of myself here, it’s an ID photo for gaining entry to one of San Francisco’s jails from the days when I used to do outreach in the jails. Damned if that pictureâa photo taken by the Sheriff’s Departmentâdoesn’t look real good. It’s not normal for a photo ID taken by a municipal employee to look good.
But here’s the thing: I was taking care of myself and not in the half-measures way that seems to be availing me nothing. I was getting to the gym four times a week and careful about what I ate. Now I pretty much make it there twice, just to use the lockers and shower when I run, and never actually do anything inside the gym. And I have thirty pounds and three notches on my belt to show for it. And a lot less strength.
I’ve fallen back to a level of exercise appropriate for cardiac patients and the morbidly obese. I’m probably getting all of the systemic health benefits of exercise, and that’s a good thing, but I’m not actually improving, and I’ve fallen way back.
This is just a learning experience, I guess. Self-improvement is hard. Listen to that in your mind’s ear in Talking Barbie’s voice, but self-improvement rather than math.
The thing is, I don’t know any way other than self-improvement to stop hating myself. If I’m not good enough now, I have only two choices: acceptance or action. I need to better myself or else somehow develop the denial mechanisms for self-acceptance. I don’t seem to have those mechanisms. I’m vaguely haunted by the idea that improvement won’t be enough, but I’m into the idea that progress helps even when we fall short of our ideals.
Dude, self-acceptance is not
Dude, self-acceptance is not about denial.
Seems like it can come from
Seems like it can come from A) changing what I don’t like about myself or B) pretending those things don’t bother me.
How about © changing your
How about © changing your mental habit of disliking?
That doesn’t mean you have to give up having goals for self-improvement, it just means ceasing to regard yourself with an attitude of rejection. I mean, that’s what acceptance is, right — the opposite of rejection?
Actually, no: acceptance is the opposite of denial.
It’s true that in some sense, one has to earn one’s own self-respect. You won’t think of yourself as a good person if you go around lying or hurting people or running away from anything that makes you nervous. But on the more basic level, your first choice is between whether you take a judgemental and fault-finding attitude toward yourself, or whether you let yourself be as you are and work with what you’ve got, rather than with what you wish you had.
At bottom, it isn’t about believing or disbelieving that you meet some random standard of adequacy — it starts with just “What is, is.” Self-rejection often comes out of a sort of magical belief that yourself, and perhaps the whole world along with you, should have turned out some entirely different way from how they actually are. If you expect the world to work differently from how it is working, then you won’t be patient with you being the way you are instead of the way you should have been.
The question of whether some standard of adequacy is being met is NOT RELEVANT. You’re either in the present moment as it is, or you’re in a hypothetical alternate universe. Where you keep wondering why the laws of physics never quite get followed correctly.
But to get back to more mundane issues of expecting yourself to live up to a standard of adequacy… note that judging yourself is an active process, and in principle all you have to do is just cease activity in that area, and you’ve got self-acceptance. Plus a bunch of spare energy that you were previously wasting on fighting yourself.
For most people, the fear to be faced that obstructs self-acceptance is the idea that if you don’t monitor yourself and criticize yourself, then you won’t do what needs to be done — you’ll turn lazy. Well, if that was the kind of approach that produced constructive self-improvement, IT WOULD HAVE WORKED BY NOW. In practice, even a purely intellectual decision along self-improvement lines works better than one encumbered with this crap.
Amen to that!
Dad
Amen to that!
Dad