
Don’t overthink the “self love” thing.
“Self love” is such a loaded term for CPTSD survivors.
We were very frequently conditioned to hate ourselves— and self love feels virtually impossible.
We get told a lot that we “have to learn to love ourselves” before we can love someone else (which, by the way, is bullsh*t— or, at the very last, nowhere near that simple).
All the emphasis on “self love” can make trauma survivors feel hopeless and defective, given our frequent struggles to even like ourselves, let alone love ourselves.
It’s true that how we feel about ourselves matters to our trauma recovery.
After all, trauma recovery asks us to expend enormous effort caring for ourselves— and why would we do that, if we don’t even like ourselves?
Feeling negatively about ourselves, feeling worthless, and feeling hopeless often feed suicidal ideation (though suicidal ideation is also nowhere near that simple most of the time).
But insisting we jump right to “self love” from self-distrust and self-hate is almost always a leap too far, too fast for most trauma survivors.
Where I find we get most hung up is the fact that we simply cannot imagine feeling love toward ourselves.
And insisting that we FEEL something we don’t feel now is a recipe for shame and frustration— because you just can’t force a feeling.
So: maybe don’t start with insisting that you feel, or “have” to feel, anything, including self love.
The thing about “love” is, it’s not just a feeling. It’s also a verb.
Yes, the verb “to love” often accompanies the feeling of “love”— but in the context of trauma recovery, it’s useful to remember that we are often called upon to do things that are inconsistent with how we feel.
Recovery asks us to stay alive when we don’t feel like staying alive.
Recovery asks us to try when we don’t feel like trying.
And, to be sure: realistic, sustainable trauma recovery asks us to love ourselves, behaviorally, when we don’t feel particularly loving toward anyone.
Put another way: we don’t ned to feel loving toward ourselves, to behave lovingly toward ourselves.
Instead of asking the question, “how can I FEEL loving toward myself?”, maybe start out with the question, “if I DID love myself, how would I behave toward myself right now?”
Most of us can spitball a few examples of loving behavior if we think about it.
And most of those examples of loving behavior don’t necessarily break the bank.
First and foremost among “loving” behaviors might be, we absolutely refuse to talk to ourselves like our bullies and abusers did.
A “loving” behavior toward ourselves might be feeding ourselves adequately and appropriately.
A self “loving” behavior might be refusing to shame or punish ourselves for being human.
Mind you: we don’t need to FEEL loving toward ourselves to DO any of those.
We might have to DO those things “under protest”— but, realistically, we’re doing so many things “under protest” in the wake of trauma, we might as well do things that can actually nudge our recovery forward.
When I say “don’t overthink the self love thing,” what I mean is, don’t imagine you have to figure out how to FEEL something you don’t yet FEEL.
Start with loving behaviors— and keep it simple.
Something we know about self esteem is, it tends to developing as we behave toward ourselves with care and respect— that is to say, DOING the loving stuff tends to lead to FEELING loving toward ourselves over time.
Yes, it takes patience. Yes, you may not be in the mood for it.
So just think baby steps.
Ask the Recovery Supporting Question (RSQ), “if I DID love myself, what’s the smallest possible thing I could do to demonstrate or communicate that?”
Think a thing so small, that it’d almost be harder to NOT do it.
Start there.
That’s how nervous system change actually, realistically happens— by starting small and not overthinking it.
Breathe; blink; focus.
