Back from the Hiatus...


I apologize for the long hiatus. I temporarily fell off the wagon of self-acceptance for awhile. As the widely known Japanese Proverb states fall seven times stand up eight. Growth is a tedious process but it's no way around it. You either stay stagnate or continue treading through. It's time to throw those hiking boots back on.

Today, I came across the official website of Nathaniel Branden. He's a psychologist and a pioneer in the field of self-esteem and personal development. Dr. Branden has written numerous books including The Psychology of Self-Esteem, How to Raise Your Self-Esteem, and The Six Pillars of Self-Esteem. On his website there's over 15 extremely informative articles on self esteem. One particular article that struck me was justifiably titled It's Your Life, So Make the Most of It. In it he touches self-responsibility and 10 different points to consider when attempting to reach your full potential. Dr. Nathaniel Branden includes an exercise in the article that asks readers to write various endings to three sentences dealing with actions and consequences. He suggests recording the results daily for an entire week and reflecting on the weekend.

I'm starting the week with this exercise. Feel free to practice along. Definitely check out Dr. Branden's website. It's plenty of helpful information there for free if you browse around.

Positive Affirmations to Boost Your Self Esteem

Low Self Esteem - Here's what to do:


* Low self esteem feeds on negative thoughts so Don't indulge in self criticism. Why are you waging war against yourself? Read self talk and silence your inner judge.

* You can choose to please yourself It is good to you care about other's feelings but aren't your needs just as important? Don't neglect yourself!

* Don't try to be like someone else. This leads to lack of self worth and confidence. You are unique and you cannot be someone else. Strive to improve but don't criticise yourself for not being as successful, beautiful, slim or as popular as someone else.

* Take life and yourself less seriously. Failure just means you are not successful YET. Everybody fails before succeeding, don't look on it as failure but as a means to learning. Perhaps you just need a change of direction. Problems make you stronger if you strive to overcome them.

* Self worth, confidence and assuredness increase when you Focus on your needs and desires. You deserve to live life as you want. This is not selfishness as what you want doesn't hurt others or prevent them from living life on their terms.

* Focus on your successes. Lack of confidence feeds on your feelings of failure and inadequacy. Remember the truly successful things you have done in your life. Reward yourself when you do succeed.
Use positive affirmations and quotes. Read them when you are feeling negative and need inspiration.

Angel Affirmations for Self-Esteem, Doreen Virtue

Staying Motivated – Notes Book #1


In the fifth chapter of 365 Steps to Self-Confidence (book #1) the focus centered on goal setting and staying motivated. Achieving self-esteem like any other task requires perseverance. You have to stay on track. Setting goals are an excellent method to keep moving in the right direction slowly building up self-confidence.

To change one’s life: Start immediately, Do it flamboyantly. No exceptions. No excuses. -Professor William James

Exercise #29 Answer the following question honestly. What am I trying to achieve by believing I lack confidence?

Wow, this was a really difficult exercise. I instantly wanted to defend myself like I’m not trying to achieve anything. WTH? But then I thought back on the previous chapter about being responsible for every thought and action. Technically the question is valid. After thinking long and hard I came up with the following:

* Comfort in bondage.
* A way to stay within the boundaries I let others set for me.
* Excuses for not trying certain things.

Exercise #34
– On an index card write down the following affirmation to repeat daily.

‘I think, speak, and act confidently at all times.’


Additional Notes:

Make a list of things you’d do if your self-image and confidence in abilities was extremely high. Turn the list into solid goals that you want to accomplish.

Keep up with your positive affirmations to stay motivated.

Confidence, Your Responsibility – Notes Book #1


In the fourth chapter of 365 Steps to Self-Confidence (book #1) readers are encouraged to take responsibility for their confidence and daily actions. The only person with the power to change how you feel is you. This chapter is all about taking full responsibility for yourself, setting goals, planning, and putting it into action.

The power lies within you. It’s important to let go of negative habits.

For any of us to be truly free, we must first be willing to be responsible for our lives. –David McNally

Exercise #25 – Create a Wall of Confidence. Post confidence boosting ideas, notes, quotes, or affirmations to inspire.

I really like this idea. As a crafter and scrapbook-er I love making collages. The book suggested designating an entire wall in your home for this but I’m going to use the back of my bedroom door instead.

Similar to Vision Boards I’ll add quotes, affirmations, and positive images to a large piece of white poster board. Hang it up on the back of my door as the ‘Door of Confidence.’ When it’s done I’ll post a picture of it.

Becoming What You Want to Be – Notes Book #1


In the third chapter of 365 Steps to Self-Confidence (book #1) readers are asked to examine where their self-esteem issues come from. Although there are several factors that contribute in the end confidence or lack of is learned. Anything learned can be altered or improved.

Staying positive is essential for this process of growth. Sow seeds of confidence daily. Think good things about yourself and your potential.

Exercise #18
– Grab an index card and write down the following:

‘I greet every new day with firm commitment to raising my confidence, I will do whatever is required to become more confident.’

Place it where you can see it each morning upon waking. Silently repeat it and a reminder to the commitment you’ve made to yourself.

How Confident Are You? - Notes Book #1


In the second chapter of 365 Steps to Self-Confidence (book #1) the author addresses how confidence relates to self-image and self-esteem. The definitions stood out to me the most.

Self-image - the way you see yourself.

Self-Worth – value someone places on oneself. For example how worthy someone may think they are to receive joy, love, and success.

Competence
- the beliefs about your capacity to achieve and considered the core of confidence.

Belonging – feelings of self acceptance and respect by others.

All of these factors determine overall self-esteem.

Exercise #8 – How confident are you? Rate it on a scale of 0-10. What would you like it to be? I think I’m about at a 5 as far as confidence goes. It varies from day to day. I’d like to be at a 10 or beyond that if possible.

Exercise #9 &10 – Rate self-worth. On average a 5/6. How you relate to others out of 10? Where would you like to be on that same scale? Right now a 6 and I’d like to be at 10.

Exercise #11 is the same as the one I did earlier Self-Esteem Exercise #1: The List and #12 is another rating exercise for specific attributes like health and happiness. This chapter gave me a more in-depth perspective on where I am right now in my own personal growth.

Additional Notes:


Try smiling at yourself in a mirror each morning and night before going to bed. It will help program your mind towards acceptance.

Remember, your potential is limitless.

How to Build Confidence – Notes Book #1


In the first chapter of 365 Steps to Self-Confidence (book #1) the author David Lawrence Preston introduces readers to his five key concepts for achieving confidence. It involves self-awareness and ITIA (Intention, Thinking, Imagination, and Acting ‘As If’). The book also suggests getting a notebook to record thoughts and exercises for each chapter. Each entry should be dated. I’m going to start a notebook and post some of my notes and exercise results online.

What does confidence mean to you?


Exercise #3 – Describe confident people, what do they do that others don’t.

Confident people are secure. They don’t constantly second guess themselves. They believe in themselves. Confident people are successful. They interact with others well.

Exercise #4 – List 3 limiting beliefs about yourself. Change them into a positive affirmation.

I’m not good enough. - - - I am worthy and deserving.
I’m not beautiful. - - - I am beautiful.
I’m not capable. - - - I am more than capable.

Additional Notes:


Commit to spend time each day working towards building up your confidence.
Whatever you believe you can achieve.
Stop putting yourself down, when you catch yourself using negative self-talk immediately stop and replace it with something positive.

Self-esteem isn’t everything, its just that there’s nothing without it.
– Gloria Steinem

365 Steps to Self-Confidence


I found this interesting download for the ebook 365 Steps to Self-Confidence: A Programme for Personal Transformation in Just a Few Minutes a Day. The book is divided into 52 sections focusing on 7 specific areas of growth covering:

* Deciding to be confident
* Self-awareness
* Thinking confidently
* Using your imagination to improve self-image
* Acting with confidence
* Confident communication

Each section is loaded with helpful tips and exercises to help boost self-esteem and confidence. For the next couple of weeks I'll be reading this book and posting about my experiences along with other information I find on my journey to self-love. Listed below is the download link.

http://rapidshare.com/files/131647904/365.zip

Words that Can Just About Cripple You


Few of us would passively hold still while being whacked with sticks and pelted with rocks. So how come, when it comes to verbal assaults, so many of us go all deer-in-the-headlights?

Maybe it's because some of those word missiles have been launched at us so many times, we no longer consciously register them (think of the parent who's been telling his offspring they'll never amount to anything for the past, oh, forty years). Other times, we don't hear the verbal slap for what it is because it comes disguised as "advice" from someone we think we can trust.

But even when verbal attacks are pretty obvious, it's not always easy to know how to defend against them. Consider the following:

Boss: Yeah, great idea, Jenkins, but for now, let's just focus on the project, okay? (Jenkins, you're a moron. Stop thinking and just follow orders.)
Spouse: You're going to eat that second piece of pie? (God, you're a pig.)
In-Law: In my day, we didn't let children talk back like that. (You're a wuss of a parent and you're totally ruining my grandchildren.)
PTA parent: What a cute skirt you're wearing - my teenager has one just like it. (Slut.)
Neighbor: What an interesting color to paint your house. (You have the taste of a color-blind orangutan and you just lowered the entire value of the subdivision by 10%.)

No one likes a fight, and most of us don't want to make waves. So instead of defending ourselves or retreating, as we would from a physical attack, we just stand there under verbal assault and take it. We smile on the outside, and inside, we seethe. We pretend something unacceptable wasn't just said. But for the rest of the day, our shoulders ride just a bit higher and the acid in our stomachs roils more intensely. That night, when we go to sleep, we grind our teeth.

Sadly, we are often our worst verbal abusers. In fact, most of us keep up a running internal critique pretty much all day long: my butt is as big as a house...God, why did I make that stupid joke?...I have no will power...I am so disorganized...I'm such a procrastinator...I can never think of anything clever to say...I'm no good with money...nothing ever works out the way I want it to... I will never fit in.

These personal attacks can be the most insidious of all, because most of the time, they run on auto-pilot, like subliminal mp3 files that, over time, sap our energy and erode our self esteem. When we allow ourselves-and others-to beat us up with language, we unknowingly take those words into our very core, and make it a part of who we are. Eventually, we can no longer distinguish between abusive, painful thoughts and objective reality.

So how do we defend ourselves against verbal hand grenades? The first step is to acknowledge that words and thoughts can and do hurt us. Labels, judgments, criticisms, and limiting beliefs chip away at us, bruise us, just as other, more visible weapons do.

The next step? Just what you'd do if your home was under attack: fortification. In other words, build your boundaries. Decide what you will allow in your life, what you will let into your head and your heart, what you will and will not believe. Only you know your own truth. Don't let anyone else's truth-even a loved one's-on board unless it resonates with your most essential self.

How to Develop and Nurture Love


By Dr. Annette Colby, RD on SelfGrowth.com

Increasing your love of self involves an intention to become more self-loving and then following up this intention with reinforcing actions. An intention involves a conscious decision to be happier and more fulfilled in your own life. You make a new decision to be alive . . . and then accept personal responsibility to make your life a better, more enjoyable experience. It may take considerable effort to pry yourself out of a life that feels less than joyful, but it is entirely possible to have the kind of life you want for yourself. Below are some practical ideas of how to begin expanding your love of self:

• Acknowledge and verbally praise yourself.
• Have fun more often.
• Learn new ways to relax and release tension.
• Practice conscious, deep, full-bodied breathing several times each day.
• Think inspiring thoughts.
• Instead of always focusing on the problem, decide to focus on desired outcomes.
• Fill your life with beauty, such as times of silence, beautiful music, flowers.
• Raise your confidence by taking daily small, achievable actions steps that support your goal.
• Acknowledge your efforts and your successes.
• Reward yourself daily.
• Listen to your intuition and then follow it.
• Let yourself succeed.
• Nurture yourself by imagining desired outcomes to life's situations.
• Offer yourself affection in many, many different ways.
• Choose to think thoughts that bring inner peace (rather than worry).
• Remember and feel gratitude.



Love may be a mystery. The good news is that the art of increasing self-love is not so mysterious. In fact, it is something you can learn through knowledge and practice. Imagine your self-love as a seed inside of you. Even if it is just a tiny, undernourished, seed right now, you have the ability to grow that seed into something spectacular. The growth of your self-love is not going to happen overnight. However, by taking certain actions, your seed will most assuredly grow. Today, make a commitment to yourself to nurture your inner seed of love. Ask yourself, "How can I be more loving to myself today?" Use your imagination and come up with several possibilities. Then, follow through with your thoughts and put them into action. Do this every day, and watch as you begin to create the loving life you deserve.

Exercise #1 Part II - What I Want to Be List


Exercise #1 - Part II: Be Who You Are

Once you see where your idea of “I” came from, you can begin to be the person you are meant to be.

On your list, start crossing off the things that you would NOT like to carry around anymore and add words or phrases that sound good to you.

“I am so pretty”.

“I have a million dollars in the bank”.

“I treat myself well”.

“I can fit into those cute shorts from last summer”. :-)

What you are doing is creating your own version of “I”, instead of letting others do it for you.

The funny thing is that whatever you write on your “What I Want to Be” list, is what you ARE when you drop all of your negative programming. And that’s all that ‘learning how to love yourself’ is… dropping everything that is not the real “You”.

See, at your root… at your core… you are a perfect being.

You are “YOU”… Unique and divine.

You are beautiful, strong, and powerful. You are worthy of the absolute BEST that the universe has to offer because you are a child of the universe.

When you realize this, you will become more authentic and not be guided by other people’s opinions. You will joyfully express your “I” in the world. Learning how to love yourself and being who you really are, is the greatest gift that you can give to anyone...most of all, to yourself.

First Love You and everything else will fall into place.

Update Creating My List... Self Esteem Exercise #1


Exercise #1 Update: Make a List of Everything You Think About Yourself (Sorry for the delay.)

The first exercise was draining. I actually became quite emotional as every negative thought about me throughout the years surfaced. A simple task like making a list turned quickly into an arduous one. I started off with like three maybe four good thoughts and then I hit this gigantic wall of self-loathing. Every minuscule terrible thing ever spoken about me or to me leaped onto the page. Comments from grade school even popped into my head. Horrible nicknames, abusive things my parents have said during my childhood, angry statements from boyfriends of the past, and my own endless thoughts about myself were overwhelming. In the end I had a long sheet of notebook paper describing someone I do not want to be and making me question my concept of who I am.

Being A 'You Suck' Collector

Doing this exercise made me realize I have a lot of work to do. There are so many powerful negative thoughts that I carry with me. I suppose that was the purpose of the exercise to get a bold reality check on how you view yourself. It was disturbing for me. I never think about those things. I guess I secretly took up the hobby of a 'You Suck' collector. Any put downs or criticisms that come at me I've been taking them in to display on my mental 'Who I Am' bookshelf. Not a good idea.

I know now this process isn't going to be easy but it will be life changing. Although, it took me several days to do the first part of this exercise I think I'm ready for part two. Are you?

A Motivational Poem:



Promise Yourself
By Christian D. Larson

Promise yourself….
To be so strong that nothing
can disturb your peace of mind.
To talk health, happiness, and prosperity
to every person you meet.
To make all your friends feel
that there is something in them
To look at the sunny side of everything
and make your optimism come true.
To think only the best, to work only for the best,
and to expect only the best.
To be just as enthusiastic about the success of others
as you are about your own.
To forget the mistakes of the past
and press on to the greater achievements of the future.
To wear a cheerful countenance at all times
and give every living creature you meet a smile.
To give so much time to the improvement of yourself
that you have no time to criticize others.
To be too large for worry, too noble for anger, too strong for fear,
and too happy to permit the presence of trouble.
To think well of yourself and to proclaim this fact to the world,
not in loud words but great deeds.
To live in faith that the whole world is on your side
so long as you are true to the best that is in you.

High School Reunion Star Cyndi & Self-Esteem


It's this reality TV show on the TV Land Network called 'High School Reunion' that I've been watching regularly. It airs every Wednesday at 10pm. I've always been a reality TV addict but this is my first time tuning in this season.

I was never too keen on the show's concept of living with old high school classmates. Personally, I hated high school. It wasn't fun for me. I could totally relate to the character Ned in the film '17 Again' when his friend asks him to go back to high school with him and he says, "No...way, I made a promise to myself a long time ago that once I left I would never go back to that god forsaking place again."

In the show 16 classmates reunite to rekindle the past or get closure. There's this set of women on the show that were part of the 'popular hot chick clique' and called themselves Summer Girls. They also have a gay guy that used to get beat up in high school, the bully, the nerd, the cheerleader, and etc. The former nerd is a now attractive blond named Cyndi who happens to work as a stripper now. During this week's episode Cyndi made it obvious that she still carried a chip on her shoulders from the traumatic experiences of high school. Self-esteem and confidence or the lack of really plays a major role in the lives of the former classmates.

Self-Esteem in High School


While I watched the episode I couldn't help but think back to my own high school days and the comments that affected my image then and even today. Some of the remarks I wrote on the 'Who Am I? List' exercise from Wednesday were from that time. Isn't it crazy how the people we meet often shape our lives.

Cyndi addresses her struggle with self-esteem in her TV Land Blog post. Check it out!
Cyndi's Personal Thoughts in Blog Post - Beautiful, Inside and Out

For some, high school was paradise. For others, it was an unforgettable nightmare. Twenty years after graduation, 16 classmates from Chaparral High School's Class of '89 reunite on the tropical Hawaiian island of Kauai to relive their high school glory days. The Football Star, The Nerd, The Cheerleader, The Ladies Man – they're all back and things haven't changed as bitter rivalries resurface and old flames reignite.
High School Reunion TV Show | Chaparral High Class of '89 | TVLand.com

First Step to Loving Yourself


The first incredible website I found online with the topic of self-love is called First Love You. This site has an assortment of really great articles on learning to love yourself. I recommend checking it out. Their technique focuses on becoming Alpha Females/Males and tapping deep into your personal power. It's a cool concept. They also have a lot of relationship and dating advice. I really liked the mental exercises suggested in some of the articles. So, for the next few days I'm going to work on them and report back.

First Step to Loving Yourself (www.firstloveyou.com)

We give and nurture… sometimes to the point of resentment… and then expect others to fill our emotional well. It simply doesn’t work that way.

The first step in learning how to love yourself is healing your past.

It’s so important to figure out WHY you believe what you do about yourself, and HOW you came to believe it.

Self-Esteem Exercise #1 - Make a List of Everything You Think About Yourself

Grab a piece of paper and a pen and write your name in big letters at the top. Allow yourself to write freely all over the page to answer the question “Who am I?”. You might start with your job title, or some role that you play (“daughter to so-and-so” or “godmother to ______”), and then you may move on to more descriptive words. “I am strong”, “I am weak”, “I am clumsy”, “I’m not happy all the time”, “I laugh a lot”.

Don’t just scratch the surface on this. Try to recall every little thing that someone has said about you. Write down every nickname people have given you. Write down what your high school sweetheart used to call you. Write what your old boss said about you in your last performance review. Write down every rumor you’ve heard about yourself. Write and think, write and think. Dig deep.

After you do this, take a look at your list. What ideas from your past have you been carrying around? What thoughts have shaped your reality? What is your ‘Ego’ made of?

How to Love Yourself - Louise Hay's Steps


How to Love Yourself
By: Louise Hay

1. Stop all criticism: Criticism never changes a thing. Refuse to criticize yourself. Accept yourself exactly as you are. Everybody changes. When you criticize yourself, your changes are negative. When you approve of yourself, your changes are positive.

2. Don't scare yourself: Stop terrorizing yourself with your thoughts. It's a dreadful way to live. Find a mental image that gives you pleasure (mine is yellow roses), and immediately switch your scary thought to a pleasure thought.

3. Be gentle and kind and patient: Be gentle with yourself. Be kind to yourself. Be patient with yourself as you learn the new ways of thinking. Treat yourself as you would someone you really loved.

4. Be kind to your mind: Self-hatred is only hating your own thoughts. Don't hate yourself for having the thoughts. Gently change the thoughts.

5. Praise yourself: Criticism breaks the inner spirit. Praise builds it up. Praise yourself as much as you can. Tell yourself how well you are doing with every little thing.

6. Support yourself: Find ways to support yourself. Reach out to friends, and allow them to help you. It is being strong to ask for help when you need it.

7. Be loving to your negatives: Acknowledge that you created them to fulfill a need. Now you are finding new, positive ways to fulfill those needs. So. lovingly release the old negative patterns.

8. Take care of your body: Learn about nutrition. What kind of fuel does your body need to have optimum energy and vitality? Learn about exercise. What kind of exercise can you enjoy? Cherish and revere the temple you live in.

9. Mirror work: Look into your own eyes often. Express this growing sense of love you have for yourself. Forgive yourself looking into the mirror. Talk to your parents looking into the mirror. Forgive them, too. At least once a day, say: "I love you, I really love you!"

10. LOVE YOURSELF - DO IT NOW! Don't wait until you get well or lose the weight, or get the new job, or find the new relationship. Begin NOW - do the best you can.

What is Self Esteem?


Self-esteem is your opinion of yourself. High self esteem is a good opinion of yourself and low self esteem is a bad opinion of yourself.

Self-confidence is the self-assuredness in one's personal judgment, ability, power, etc., sometimes manifested excessively.

To accept and love yourself unconditionally is to:

* Place no condition on yourself as to how to behave or what to be in order to receive self-acceptance and self-love.
* Not use "if-then" clauses in establishing conditions for accepting and loving yourself.
* Take a risk to be open and vulnerable to who you are with no preset limits or expectations.
* Accept and love yourself for the fact that you exist rather than for what you do.
* Give yourself the respect and latitude to be yourself rather than to be what others want or expect you to be.
* Set the stage for yourself to feel warmth, caring and concern for yourself which results in your growing in self-esteem and self-worth.

About the Journey...


Have you ever felt completely alone, invisible, unworthy, disgusting, ugly or totally unloved? I've been feeling like all of the above lately. I guess that's why I decided to start this blog. After a devastating break-up and wasting the past several years of my life feeling defeated I've come to the realization that change has to start with me. I need to boost my self-esteem, confidence, and attain unconditional self love and acceptance if I'm ever gonna move beyond my past.

After scouring the World Wide Web for tips on how to do this I found myself completely overwhelmed. I didn't know where to start. There's endless articles, mental exercises, books, hypnosis, affirmations, and hundreds of other materials on the subject. How do you change what you think about yourself? Which method really works? Can you actually DIY high self-esteem and confidence? I figured the only way to find out is to try them all. It can't hurt.

This site is a journal of my journey towards a more positive outlook on who I am. Daily I'll be researching techniques, blogging about my experiences, and posting as much helpful information or links to assist anyone with the same goals.

Operation: Fall in love with yourself .... begins today!

Check back regularly and feel free to comment. :)