avatarElizabeth Gordon

Summary

The article provides strategies for effective self-advocacy to improve personal well-being and self-awareness.

Abstract

The article "6 Ways to be Better Self-Advocates" emphasizes the importance of personal agency in shaping one's life and emotional state. It encourages readers to start the day with a positive morning routine, be mindful of self-talk, listen to the body's feedback, use constructive phrases in conflicts, accept and process emotions without resistance, and clear one's energy field regularly. The overarching message is to foster a compassionate, self-supportive relationship with oneself to navigate life's challenges with greater resilience and authenticity.

Opinions

  • Morning routines are crucial for setting a positive tone for the day and should include personal time for deep breathing, journaling, and reflection.
  • Self-talk is a significant determinant of one's mental state, and kind, affirming language is essential for personal growth.
  • The body provides reliable feedback on personal alignment and should be trusted, especially when intuition conflicts with logical reasoning.
  • In conflicts, it's important to communicate effectively, acknowledging different perspectives without resorting to blame.
  • Emotions should be fully experienced without resistance, as resistance tends to prolong emotional discomfort beyond its natural duration of about 90 seconds.
  • Regularly clearing one's energy field is recommended to maintain personal boundaries and prevent the accumulation of external negativity.
  • Responding to stress and turmoil with care and compassion for oneself is a powerful act of self-advocacy.

6 Ways to be Better Self-Advocates

Being on our own side is half the battle

Image courtesy of Murtaza Ali on Pixabay

Our lives will be filled with many things: relationships, experiences, successes, and failures.

Throughout all that, there is one constant: us.

How we feel is entirely up to us. We get to choose what we focus on and what we discard. We have a say in our state of being way more than we have been told. It’s time to claim ourselves and pave the way for more fulfilling moments.

Below are 6 ways we can be better self-advocates and claim our sexy, authentic selves:

1. Establish a morning routine.

I cannot stress enough how important it is to start the day with a good, positive, and uplifting vibe. How we wake up and spend the first few minutes sets the tone for the entire day.

Take at least 5–10 minutes for yourself in the morning. Do some deep breathing, journal, stretch, ask yourself some questions and decide how you want to feel as you move into your responsibilities.

It’s easy to make excuses and toss our own needs aside, but even five minutes of calm focus will make a huge difference in how we feel throughout the day. Choose a mantra or affirmation to fall back on when you get overwhelmed or stressed.

Note: if it helps, set up your coffee/tea and breakfast for the morning the night before. Do this with work and school stuff too. Less details in the morning can help our mind stay peaceful.

2. Become more aware of your self-talk.

Guess who you will be around more than anyone else in your entire life? You. Not your lover, not your bestie, not even your kids.

We live with ourselves all day long. What we say, how we say it, and how we respond all happens in our own heads. It’s time to speak more kindly to ourselves.

The real purpose of mantras and affirmations is to train our egos away from the conditioning it received and toward a more enlightened perspective. Pick some that work for you specifically. Notice how the body responds when you choose a better thought.

3. Start listening to your body more — in fact, start living there.

The body doesn’t lie. It also doesn’t defer to the beliefs or whims of the ego. We must start trusting the feedback we receive.

Most of us are disconnected from the neck down most of the day. Why? Because we’ve made our conscious mind king and begun to ignore everything else.

Our body will tell us exactly how aligned we are. It’s precise, and it’s never wrong. Many times, we push forward when something in our gut is screaming at us to stop. We follow logic verses what we know to be true on an energetic level.

My teacher always reminds me of this: if you feel confused, lost, overwhelmed, or out of sorts, this is a clear sign you are in your head and have sent your energy up and out. Stop, sit, and breathe for a minute. Reconnect with the body and send your energy down through the earth. Lean in and wait for divine guidance to bubble up from below.

Our bodies will always speak truth if we are grounded, rooted, and centered.

4. Find a phrase that helps in conflict.

Existing with other humans can be a complicated experience. We are all seeking the same things: to be loved, understood, valued, and to feel safe.

Many times, we forget how connected we really are, especially when our basic safety is threatened.

When conflicts arise, it can feel uncomfortable and scary — even more so if we experienced abuse or chaos as children.

When a disagreement or conflict comes up, it helps to have some go-to phrases that can acknowledge the problem, but also take us out of the line of fire.

Here are some ideas:

This is an upsetting situation and we both want to be heard. Let’s stop and calmly express what’s bothering us.

We have a different point of view on this topic and I acknowledge that. Here is how I feel about it. How do you feel?

We’re both scared because we feel unsafe, but, ultimately, we both want to be understood. How can we express our anger or frustration without blame?

5. Accept how you feel, no matter what.

Suffering has been defined as “the resistance to what is,” which is exactly what it feels like.

When we feel like utter crap, it’s often made worse because we resist it. We think we are somehow less than because we are having a human emotion or feeling, therefore, making it worse.

The life of an emotional neurotransmitter in the brain is 90 seconds! That’s it! So why does it feel like it lasts longer? Most likely because we are telling a story about the feeling verses sitting and really feeling it.

When you feel pissed off, allow yourself to be pissed off. Yell, scream, hit something with a baseball bat. Cuss up a storm! Get it out of your system — and this is very important — without telling a story about it. It will pass, no matter how strong it feels for those 90 seconds.

Do this with sadness, frustration, doubt, rage, fear — feel it, accept it, acknowledge it, and then let it go.

6. Clear your energy field at least twice a day.

We as humans are energetic beings. Because of this, we pick up other people’s energy as we go through our day.

Think about walking into a room where you know people have been talking badly about you — you can feel it. Conversely, think about walking into a room where people have been talking lovingly about you — again, you can feel it.

As we interact with other people, our energies mix. Because energy has no will of its own, we have to direct it away from us if we don’t like how it feels.

It’s simple. Sit, get present, and do a body scan. Maybe you feel sadness or anger that you know doesn’t belong to you in this moment. Identify it, name it, and say, “This isn’t mine; I release this back to Source (or whatever word helps you feel connected).” Really feel it leave your field. Energy must go where you tell it — it can’t just stick to you without your permission.

Knowing this will bring you a sense of personal empowerment unlike anything else. To realize you can direct energy around you is something most folks are completely unaware of — they just accept the vibration they’ve picked up as their own.

We are so much more powerful than we have been told.

When stress or inner turmoil arises, remind yourself that the best practice is to be on your own side. How can you soothe? How can you acknowledge it? How can you soften?

Our power lies in how we respond, so respond with the care you would give a small child or animal. Cherish yourself.

It’s safe to be right where you are. It’s safe to depend on and trust yourself. It’s safe to choose a different way.

Excerpts are taken from here.

Self-awareness
Self Advocacy
Self Care
Self Love
Self Help
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