Of
 the many factors that shape our lives -- geographical location, family 
dynamics, resources and influence, beliefs, self-concept, support 
systems, motivation, relationships, luck, karma or fate -- our sense of 
self-worth is the single most important determinant of the health, 
abundance, and joy we allow into our life. 
To the degree we doubt our worthiness, we 
limit or sabotage our efforts, and undermine our relationships, finances
 or health. Ever wondered, for example, why so many young actors, who 
gain sudden wealth, fame, and celebrity, go on to self-destruct with 
drugs and erratic behavior? Or why many able-bodied people live on the 
streets, reduced to begging for spare change. Or why some people 
continue to accept abusive mates or undesirable work conditions? 
Once we understand the lessons of 
self-worth, we are in a better position to help such people -- but first
 we must help ourselves. So, as we proceed, note the following points: 
No one else can give you an improved sense of self worth. Self-worth comes from doing what is worthy. 
Your innate worth has never been lowered, 
compromised, or touched by fate or circumstance. It exists as a fact of 
life, like air and trees, and doesn't need to be raised, revitalized, or
 earned. 
To make this topic relevant to your own life, let's start with: 
Self-Reflection on Self-Worth: 
Consider the following questions, and answer "Yes," "No," or "Sometimes." 
When fortune smiles on you, do you think, "This can't last?" 
• Do you find it easier or more 'natural' to give than to receive? 
• Does your life feel like a series of problems? 
• Does money seem scarce or hard to come by? 
• Do you find your work or relationships fulfilling? 
• Do you work long hours and lack leisure time? 
• Do you resent or envy people who take frequent holidays? 
• Do you feel driven to work more, do more, be more than others? 
• Do you overeat "comfort" food, smoke, drink alcohol daily, or use other drugs? 
• Do you feel uncomfortable when you receive praise, applause, lots of attention, gifts or pleasure? 
• Have you turned down or passed up opportunities in education, work, or relationships and later regretted it? 
• Do you seem to get sick or injured more than other people? 
• If someone asks the cost of your services, do you price yourself lower than others in your field to be "fair"? 
If you answered "Yes" to a number of 
questions, did these circumstances or situations just happen to you 
solely through bad luck? Or is it possible that the choices you made, 
and actions you took, led to where you are? By acknowledging your role 
and responsibility in your current life, you find the power to make 
different choices. 
That is not to say that someone who is 
robbed at gunpoint or run into by a drunk driver somehow "attracted" or 
"drew" such experiences due to low self-worth -- such ideas are 
superstition or magical thinking. 
But when we make choices that lead to 
difficulties, it is worth understanding in this context. For example, if
 you were abused as a child, the abuser was responsible -- not you. But 
if you are abused as an adult (say by a troubled spouse), the abuse 
itself is not your responsibility -- but the choice to stay with that 
person may point to low-self worth. (This is not about blame, but it is 
about acknowledging our role or responsibility, which leads to the power
 to change.) 
Discovering your unconditional worth can 
help you expand fully into the world. It begins with a first step -- 
awareness of the problem is the beginning of the solution. 
Taking Charge by Taking Responsibility: 
Sometimes bad things just happen -- a toss
 of the karmic dice: a hurricane or freak storm, or earthquake or other 
natural disaster -- we may become a victim of circumstance. We can only 
make the best of those circumstances and learn from them and grow 
stronger. 
But much of the time, our lives are shaped
 by the choices we ourselves make, and the actions we take. So if life 
isn't going well, ask yourself this question: "Who's doing this to me?" 
If the answer is "someone else" -- if your boss or spouse or partner or 
another person appears to be the cause of your suffering -- then ask 
yourself, "Who chose to be around this person? Who chose this job. Did I
 truly have no other options? Or do I believe that 'beggars can't be 
choosers'?" 
Maybe it's time to take another look: 
We end self-sabotage only by taking 
responsibility for the choices and actions that created it. Only when we
 stop blaming our boss, the government, our parents, spouse or partner, 
children, circumstances, fate or God can we change our lives and say 
with conviction, "I chose where I am and who I'm with, and I can make 
other choices." 
Taking responsibility has nothing to do 
with blame or finding fault. Rather, taking responsibility is taking 
control, because it represents the power-moment when we recognize the 
degree to which our difficulties are self-generated, and that what we 
created, we can also change. 
The Heart of Self-Worth: 
We don't always get what we deserve in 
life; we get what we believe we deserve. So the problem is not your 
actual worth, but your perceived worth. Most of us have lost touch with 
our intrinsic goodness -- our courage and humanity -- allowed our worth 
to be covered over by memories of a thousand transgressions, real or 
imagined, so that we feel only partly deserving of life's blessings. 
Exercise:
Ask yourself: "How deserving am I?" Then 
give a numerical rating, somewhere between 1 to 100, based on how 
deserving you believe you are. Come up with whatever rating feels right 
and true for you. 60? 70? 80? 90? 95? Why? 
Bear in mind that you have been 
subconsciously rating yourself since childhood. Now we bring it into the
 light, and consider how this self-perception has shaped your choices 
and your experiences. 
Our sense of self-worth (or deservedness) 
comes from many influences, beginning in our early years -- how we were 
treated by parents or other caregivers (as judgments placed upon us by 
others become internalized). Abused children, as well as people from 
stable and loving households, but with extremely high standards, may 
both grow up with self-worth issues. The source of self-worth issues is 
complex, and does not come exclusively from how well or poorly we 
behaved. 
But whatever the reasons or sources for 
your internalized level of worth, the purpose of this week's session is 
to draw it up from the depths and into the light of awareness. 
Self-Worth and Self-Sabotage: 
As I've noted, self-worth is a 
subconscious self-assessment of your perceived value, goodness, and 
deservedness. You allow yourself to receive only those people, 
experiences and blessings that reflect your sense of worth. 
Success involves talent, effort, and 
creativity. But first and foremost, it requires a willingness to 
receive. As the saint Ramakrishna once said, "Rain or blessings may pour
 down from the heavens, but if you only hold up a thimble, a thimbleful 
is all you receive." 
The Choices You Make:
The central theme of self-worth is that 
you subconsciously choose (or allow into your life) the level of people 
and experiences (both positive and negative) that you believe you 
deserve. Until you come to realize that life is full of cactus, but you 
don't have to sit on it. 
In any moment, you are free to choose the 
high road, by being kind to others, working hard, finding supportive 
partners, and following good role models. Or you may burn bridges, use 
drugs or alcohol, or choose destructive relationships. Through your 
choices, your sense of self-worth influences whether you choose to learn
 easy lessons or more difficult ones, to strive or to struggle. 
These choices are not conscious. We don't 
wake up one morning and say to ourselves, "I think I'll sabotage my 
relationship today -- oh, no, I already did that last week; today I'll 
sabotage my finances." 
Some of us get in our own way and block 
success or abundance -- we start but don't finish that schooling or 
training that leads to a better career opportunity. Or we experience 
great success but self-sabotage, self-destruct, or don't allow ourselves
 to ride the wave and enjoy it in perspective. 
Looking back on your life, have you 
wondered, Why did I say that? Why did I do that? Have friends or loved 
ones advised against a choice or action, but you did it anyway because 
you just felt you had to? Now you understand the source, and can finally
 get out of your own way, and make more positive, empowering choices and
 to take actions to build a new life -- whether in the realm of 
exercise, diet, rest and recreation, travel, improved working 
conditions, more education or training for a better income -- the world 
opens up to you. 
Your Innate and Unconditional Worth:
Coming to appreciate your innate worth has
 nothing to do with entitlement or putting yourself above others. Rather
 it involves a basic recognition of your essential value as a human 
being -- realizing that you have done the best you could and made the 
best choices you could see at a given point in your life. More 
important, unconditional worth does not have to be earned; it belongs to
 you just as it did when you were a young child. 
Let's say someone invited you in to gaze 
upon their newborn child or month-old infant. Most of us would gaze into
 that infant's wide eyes and rate it 100 on the deservedness scale. You 
were that child once. When did you start subtracting, and why? Because 
you made mistakes? Said unkind things? Weren't always respectful or 
kind? Had slips of integrity? (Well, if you were already perfected, you 
wouldn't be living on this planet!) 
Each of us is a H.I.T. -- a 
human-in-training. It's time you recognize that you've done the best you
 could each day of your life, taking into account your own baggage, 
information, limitations, wounds, and struggles. You made the best 
choices you could see at the time. And now the time has come to 
appreciate your innate worth and choose the higher roads of life. 
The Power of Grace: 
Even when you don't feel very kind, or 
brave, or deserving, the roof over your head continues to shelter you 
from storms, the sun shines upon you, your chairs keep supporting you, 
and so does your life. Life itself is an unearned gift. This is the 
hidden meaning of grace. 
If you have debts to pay, then pay, then 
pay them forward in the currency of kindness to others -- not by 
punishing yourself. Not ever again. It is not necessary. It never has 
been. 
Daily Life Assignments: 
(1) Remind Yourself: Write out the 
following words on a post-it, or piece of paper, and post it on your 
bathroom mirror so you see it each and every day: How good can I stand 
it today? (Because that's how much good you'll allow) 
(2) Just Imagine: Let your imagination 
drift to a better life. Fantasize yourself as the star of a new movie of
 your life. You no longer have to be an extra or bit player, being told 
by others where to go and what you can or can't do. In this exercise you
 become the director, the writer, and the star. 
• Imagine, just for a moment, how 
specifically you might have an improved relationship (it may be with 
your current partner, but with some different elements); or, if it is a 
troubled relationship, then with another partner. 
• Now do the same in the workplace -- your
 current work, or another career or calling. What kind of work situation
 might you wish for? 
• Let your mind drift to another area of life -- what possibilities might await you there? 
For any and all of these areas: 
• Is it possible to draw closer to your dreams? Why or why not? 
• What steps might you take? 
• Who is stopping you? (If the answer is "me," then this "me" can instead become a friend and supporter.) 
Most of us have been our own "worst enemy"
 sometime in the past. Can you recall a choice you have made or action 
taken that you now see as a subconscious act of self-sabotage? What will
 you do to avoid such sabotage in the future? 
How have you responded to favors, gifts, 
or opportunities? How might you respond differently now? What advice 
might you give yourself, as your own best friend, about allowing 
yourself to live a more abundant, enjoyable life? 
The next time an opportunity arises that 
might interest you, or someone offers to give you something or do 
something for you -- instead of the reactive, "Oh, thanks, but I 
couldn't" open your arms and heart and mind, and say, "Yes! Thank you!" 
(Even if you don't feel deserving.) 
When you are alone, in quiet moments -- as
 odd as it may feel -- every once in a while, open your arms wide and 
say to an imagined person, or to life itself: "Yes! Thank you!" And let 
this be your approach to living -- from now on!
 
 
 
Absolutely poignant post about the way we are to be taking stock of our lives and ourselves in the quiet months. Too many ruminate and rot, instead of reevaluate, revise and respect our lessons from the seasons before.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely dear girl!
DeleteAbsolutely right my beautiful aware astute friend. Great to hear from you here
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