intothelight
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This thought has been rattling around in my head a lot lately and gets reinforced by a lot of the posts that I read on this forum. So much of the battle with PTSD is trying to get to a point of "who we were before", "normal", "functioning", etc. In the process, many of us beat ourselves up, feel lost, have low self-esteem, rely on external messages, and engage in a lot of thoughts that really set roadblocks to recovery. Many times these things defeat us before we even have a chance to start.
The terms "unconditional self acceptance" or "radical self acceptance" are used in therapy and many self-help publications. But I always struggled with the concept, so I decided to look up the definition of self acceptance and the main one I find is: "acceptance of one's self; warts and all". Have to say this definition left me less than impressed.
So perhaps, one of the first steps in self acceptance is "knowing" who we are, the good and the bad. Oops...probably shouldn't used that term as it has a negative connotation. So I guess it is more of a personal inventory of "who" we are, our character traits at this point in time. Not who we "think" we should be, who we were, who we want to be.....just who we are, right here, right now.
Self acceptance should not be confused with self-esteem. Self-esteem is tied to feeling good about who we are and is definitely integral, but separate. I also don't believe that self acceptance has anything to do with "settling", but is a starting point for recognizing where we are and identifying those things we would like to change. Kind of a base point for self-change and goal setting.
I firmly believe that self acceptance is essential to healing, but I rarely ever see any in-depth discussion or analysis of what it is and how you get to that point. So what is self acceptance? I'd like to start the discussion there and then build on it, or maybe that may even require different threads.
Here's my .02, please add yours'. :)
The terms "unconditional self acceptance" or "radical self acceptance" are used in therapy and many self-help publications. But I always struggled with the concept, so I decided to look up the definition of self acceptance and the main one I find is: "acceptance of one's self; warts and all". Have to say this definition left me less than impressed.
So perhaps, one of the first steps in self acceptance is "knowing" who we are, the good and the bad. Oops...probably shouldn't used that term as it has a negative connotation. So I guess it is more of a personal inventory of "who" we are, our character traits at this point in time. Not who we "think" we should be, who we were, who we want to be.....just who we are, right here, right now.
Self acceptance should not be confused with self-esteem. Self-esteem is tied to feeling good about who we are and is definitely integral, but separate. I also don't believe that self acceptance has anything to do with "settling", but is a starting point for recognizing where we are and identifying those things we would like to change. Kind of a base point for self-change and goal setting.
I firmly believe that self acceptance is essential to healing, but I rarely ever see any in-depth discussion or analysis of what it is and how you get to that point. So what is self acceptance? I'd like to start the discussion there and then build on it, or maybe that may even require different threads.
Here's my .02, please add yours'. :)