By Ox Drover
One of the things we hear frequently on LoveFraud and in self help books we might read is to “love yourself.” This sounds like great advice, but the thing is no one ever tells me exactly how to do this.
Some suggestions for increasing my “self love” and “self esteem” given in various books and articles are to use “positive affirmations” such as “I am wonderful,” or some other positive self talk that I should repeat over and over inside my head until I eventually start to believe it.
Even though I might say these phrases over and over, no matter how positive and “self affirming” they may sounds, somehow I never seem to truly believe them. After saying them over and over inside my head somehow there’s a little voice that repeats “Yeah, RIGHT!” in a scoffing tone.
If anyone knows my faults, it is surely me, and somehow I just have problems saying and truly believing the large statement, “I am wonderful!”
One of the things that really bothered me of late is “getting old.” I look in the mirror and see my grandmother’s face looking back. I really hate to have my photograph taken because I look at them and see this fat caricature of my youthful self looking out of the photograph. I started on a calorie control diet to lose some weight, and looked at my skin which has more than a few dark sunspots and a liberal supply of “laugh lines” (read: wrinkles). I pound on myself internally for not listening to my grandmother and staying out of the boiling sun until I became bronzed when I was young. The sunscreen I slather on now does little good now that my skin is starting to resemble the Marlboro man. How can I like myself when I look the way I do and there’s not much I can do at this late stage in the game to improve myself?
Even if I lose the excess weight, all I will accomplish is to let the “air” out of the wrinkles that the excess fat smoothes out somewhat.
So because I was feeling pretty bad about how I looked , and really, there wasn’t much at 63 years old I could do, outside of extensive plastic surgery I couldn’t afford, I decided to work on loving myself the way I look today, rather than bemoaning the fact I no longer look like I did “back then.” If I could tackle that and succeed, I could tackle anything.
One of the things I used to do was stand in front of the mirror and pull the skin on my cheeks back, like a doctor would in a face lift, smoothing out the wrinkles and the line from my nose to the corner of my mouth, imagining how I would look after a face lift. One evening doing some rare television watching I saw a former “sex goddess” movie star, now probably nearing 70, doing a guest shot on a series. She had obviously had copious plastic surgery and she looked like a caricature of her former self, almost like a melted Barbie doll. Looking at her face, and at her attempts to continue to “look young” through the marvels of modern surgery —surgery that seemed laughable, I threw back my head and I laughed.
Sure, I looked like my grandmother at my age, and I had loved that face—on her, but I was going to learn to love that face on myself. I was going to learn to love myself, starting with my body. Not the body I would have when I lost twenty pounds, or the face that I would have after I had extensive plastic surgery, but the face I have today!
How could I go about learning to love my body the way it is, the face the way it is? Well, first of all, it wasn’t going to be accomplished by standing in front of the mirror and asking, “mirror, mirror, on the wall, who’s the fairest of us all?” I am no longer a beautiful young girl with creamy smooth skin, but that doesn’t mean my body or my face isn’t okay.
My body is a marvelous machine, wrinkled or smooth, my skin, the body’s largest organ, does an excellent job of keeping me free from bacteria and viral attackers, of cooling and heating my inner body, and evaporating sweat! It is well designed for its purpose. It does a great job!
People have always said my eyes are so expressive, and they really are! I can shoot a look out of them that my kids used to say would turn you to a pillar of salt like Lot’s wife if I were angry! They are still expressive but much more inclined now to smile and crinkle at the corners with laughter. They still see far away very well, but I have to have reading glasses up close, but that’s okay. My eyes really work very well and I like them.
My hair is still thick and heavy, and has always been a good feature even now that some of the strands are turning silver. The silver in my hair, which I’ve never dyed, almost looks like an expensive frost job! I wear it in a style that’s becoming, not trying to look like the sex goddess gone to pot with flowing tresses down to my waist, or cropped close and permed into a “poodle do” with a bluish cast, but natural. I really do like my hair!
My legs are still shapely, well muscled and firm from decades of walking and riding horses, I really do like my legs. They work very well and generally don’t hurt, all the joints freely function, and I can still kneel or stretch. I’ve really got great legs with slim ankles.
My back is a pretty good back, sometimes it has let me down a bit and ached after a hard day’s work, but I haven’t always been very good to it. I think I will try to be more accommodating to my back. I’ve worked it awfully hard all these years so I’m going to be better to it. I’ll do some stretching exercises before going out to work, and I’ll use my legs more to do the heavy lifting than misusing my back muscles. I really am fortunate to have such a great back, considering how inconsiderate I have been to it all these years. Yes, I can be proud of my back.
I remember how flat my abdomen used to be, back before I had children, and it’s not that flat now, but it really is a pretty good belly after all. It works well, it’s never let me down or made me seriously ill. Sometimes I don’t give it enough fiber and it complains to me when I mistreat it, but I think it has a right to tell me if I am not being good to it. Actually, there’s still a smattering of a waist there in spite of the fact it’s a bit over weight, but overall, I can’t complain about my abdomen. Actually, I think I like it pretty well and I don’t know anyone I would trade bellies with. Yep, my belly is A-ok.
The thing I have always been the proudest of in my entire self is my mind and my memory. Testing high on the “Bell Curve” of the intelligence test has given me a verification that “I’m smart.” Not just an opinion about my intellectual ability, but an actual objective piece of data. That always felt good. I generally made good grades in school and was at the top of my class if I even gave a modest effort to succeed in school, or in my job. That gave me a bit of pride, though I did realize that this was nothing I had done for myself or achieved for myself, but was a God-given attribute like my health and stature, it was more the result of my genetic make up than anything I did or didn’t do.
After my husband’s death in a tragic accident, to which I was a witness, I lost my mind. I lost my ability to remember things in minute detail. I panicked at realizing this, and even when my psychiatric physician and my therapist assured me that “it will get better, it won’t always be this bad,” I had great difficulty believing them. I was “not as good” as I previously was, forgetting many things, having holes in my memory for things I previously would have remembered without any effort. Finally, I complained about this so much that my therapist administered an IQ test, in which I still scored even a bit higher than I had ever scored previously. My mind is still good, and there is objective evidence of this. However, I know it doesn’t work the same as it did before the aircraft crash, before the ultimate stressor. I do have short term memory lapses, but that’s okay. I’m still me. I’m still smart, and what the heck does it really mean that my spelling has gone to hell, or that I can’t remember if I took the meat out to thaw for supper? Will the world end because of this? Does this mean I don’t have the intellect to make a rational or logical decision? Does this mean that I am “defective” and “no good” or “worthless” because I reach for a word, a simple word and can’t find it even though I can see the picture of a tree in my mind but can’t find that word? No, it doesn’t mean anything. I am still me. I still have a good mind, just different than before. I like my mind, my intellect, my ability to problem solve and even though it makes new learning more of a challenge, I still grasp large concepts, though I may no longer easily remember the name of the author. I have a good mind. I have a good intellect. I still like my brain even though it isn’t the same as before.
My “heart” both figuratively and physically, I like both of them. My physical heart has beaten well and steadily for 63 years now, and my physician has tested it and declared it a healthy heart. I depend on it to keep on beating well for more years into the future. I’ve tried to be good to it, by getting exercise and though I have mistreated it by smoking, I have decided to stop doing things that will injure my good heart, so I have stopped smoking cigarettes. I eat a “heart healthy” diet low in bad fat and other things that might damage it. I am happy with my heart.
My emotional “heart” is also something that I like. It is a compassionate heart and empathetic to others in pain. It is a generous heart, and one that will share the blessings of life that it has with others. In the past, my emotional heart has sometimes given too much to others and not enough to itself or to me, so I have talked to this heart and discussed a way that it can still be a generous and compassionate heart, but to also care for itself first. If my emotional heart gives all the blessings to someone else, it will not survive, so my emotional heart has learned to care for my body and itself first, so that I may continue to share with others. I like that about my emotional heart. My emotional heart is a good heart.
Looking over my body, mind and emotional heart piece by piece, I find that I like each individual unit just as it is. It isn’t perfect, it isn’t young any more, but it has matured with some grace and in many ways is far superior over all to the body, mind and emotional heart I had as a youngster. The packaging may be a bit wrinkled, but I wouldn’t change my body for anyone else’s, and I wouldn’t give up the maturity that I have gained with life and living.
So, I have found a way to learn to love myself, one part at a time, to enjoy living within the skin that protects me from the elements, and to savor the good parts of myself. I’m learning to love myself in a positive way rather than just chanting “affirmations” that are so vague and positive but have no real substance to my inner spirit who dwells in this mortal temple. I like my temple, I like my body, I like myself. I’m unique to me. I’m special. I’m one-of-a-kind, and I’m okay!
I think the best plastic surgeons are the ones who show some discretion/ethics, and say NO once in a while.
They are the professionals….so they should know when enough is enough, or whether to perform a procedure at all.
I would think that any plastic surgeon worth his salt would be able to envision what the end result will look like BEFORE he performs the procedure.
I respect the ones who are honest enough to say “NO” to someone who has had enough, or does not need anything in the first place.
Board Certified plastic surgeons are definitely the “rock stars” of surgery…the best of the best…and their talents are needed in the field of medicine.
There are burn victims, and those who have dis-figuring scars from car accidents, etc.
Plastic surgeons do wonders for these people. I’ve seen it.
That being said….someone should be arrested for this….
http://www.topsocialite.com/jocelyn-wildenstein-has-gotten-even-scarier/
Oh, ROSA!!!! That was awful! And yes, I have seen a lot worse looking “stars” plastic surgery than the 15 they listed, but the top one is really pathetic and you are right, any doctor who woud do such things should be arrested and his/her license revoked. I know there are risks to any surgery, but to repeatedly do that is totally CRIMINAL!
A person who would undergo such mutilation is in great need of mental health services, but a physician who would continue to DO such mutilation is CRIMINAL. I realize though that if you have enough money you can buy just about whatever you want and that includes physicians who are unethical. Look at MJ and the doctor he bought, which ultimately killed him. I am glad that they are prosecuting that FAKER though. He should be tried for murder and I believe he is a psychopath. I don’t have a lot of sympathy for MJ either, as I believe he was a child molester as well as a very “sick puppy,” but that doesn’t excuse the physician for providing him with lethal drugs, or the surgeons/physicians who mutilated his face, or provided him with “offspring.” Proving that fame and money can get you a lot of things that you may desire but aren’t really healthy or good for you, or anyone else involved. Also proves that some people will DO anything for someone with fame and/or money.
The young man who was in the plane with my son D and my late husband who was so badly burned has had hundreds of plastic operations for scar tissue. Fortunately the center portion of his face, nose and eyes, and mouth were spared but he continues to need surgery on the sides of his face, arms, hands and fingers. The people who have worked on him have done wonders for his appearance and he looks pretty normal now in the face.
BTW he graduates next weekend with a BS in Aviation and son D and I will be attending the graduation (though I hate graduations of any kind!) As bad as I hate them, can’t miss this one! He is also a certified law enforcement officer and has worked part time for the local police department there during his last couple of years in college. He will be continuing school for a masters in Business Admin as well as his degree in aviation. He is also a commercial pilot as well.
He was a “great kid” of 16 when the plane crashed, and he is now, going on 6 years later, a great man and has over come so much! My husband would be very proud of what this “kid’ has accomplished against great odds and challenges! And so am I!
Oxy, I like your article. Everyone keeps telling me to do all those positive affirmations that you talked about. I do try it but it doesn’t seem to work. I’m too snarky and sarcastic for it. I say these things to myself and then the words “yea right” keeping popping into my head! I don’t know what to do with myself.Trying to figure it out.
Today is the one year anniversary of my heinous discard by the ex socio ratbastard. I still want him to rot in hell and suffer excrutiating amounts of pain that are slow and deathlike with blood and humiliation. I don’t get to do anything to him though. I guess if karma is on my side, he’ll eventually come tumbling down.
Haven’t yet figured out the HOW TO RAISE MY SELF ESTEEM THING but I’m trying. I can say I have great hair and great skin but somehow the positive attributes end there. Oh, except I’m a hell of a singer. The rest of me? WTF? What has happened to my body? Since the breakup and me quitting smoking a year prior to the breakup, I have since become Fatty McFatterson and I no longer recognize myself in the mirror. I have since joined the I HATE EVERYONE ELSE BUT ME CLUB and the snarky and sarcastic has taken over. I have now decided to treat myself as if I am a princess and everything as all about me. Since I am sick to death of working with arrogant socio narcissists I have decided to bust my ass trying to get my real career back instead of this stupid fake one.
I’m going to be happy very very soon!
Dear Erin1972,
Well, the only suggestion I have is to lookk at yourself one piece at a time. You say you like your skin, and your hair, and you are a great singer! Right there are 3 things you have named that are all wonderful things. As far as the Fattie McFatterson, that is totally within your control! SENSIBLE Diet and exercise, you’re a nurse you know the drill on that! But you are NOT those adipose cells, you are the summation of all those pieces of “you.”
I would suggest that instead of being “happy” or “unhappy” because of who you work with or what you do that you be happy ANYWAY, NOW TODAY! I’ve worked with tnose arrogant socio narcissists too, probably the same ones you work with, and I didn’t like them either but if I let them be the source of my unhappiness then I am allowing them to control me. NO one can control your happiness except that YOU allow them too.
I suggest that you read “Man’s Search for Meaning” by Dr. Viktor Frankl, he wrote the emotional memories and insights he had while he was in the Nazi concentration camps. It was very inisghtful for me, made me realize that I am the ONLY one in control of my feelings and my moods, and if I let my circumstances control ME then I am allowing it. Sure, I sometimes allow that even now, but I am striving to keep from doing that.
Sure, I’d like to look like I did when I was 20 and know what I know now, but that’s not the way it IS. We play the cards we have NOW and we either take control of ourselves or we give it over to others, to circumstances. I figure if all he went through in the Nazi camps didn’t undo Dr. Frankl, who the heck am I to alllow someone else, some circumstance, some job I hate or a psychopath to undo my happiness. I realize that nothing matieral can make me happy, no circumstance can make me happy, and no one else can make me love myself. I have to take over control of that. Sometimes I fail in doing that, but when that happens, I try to get back up and do better!
Treating yourself well is a good thing. You should treat yourself well, but I think by focusing on “your real job” or “when my ship comes in” or anything outside yourself to “be happy,” you are focusing on the external and I think focusing on the internal is where we find our happiness.
Hang in there and just keep trucking on. Remember, baby steps, and you’ve already identified 3 things, so start looking at the other positive things about yourself! You are more than skin, hair, voice and adipose tissue! (((hugs))))
Oxy, I totally do that.. stretch my face back and I hate my profile. I am convinced that ALL celebrities have their profile photo shopped.. unless having a chiseled jaw with nothing under it is a prerequisite for celebrity-dom.
I am always promising to love myself… later… once someone else loves me and I lose 20 lbs and get my face lasered.
What is wrong with me?
alohatraveler, it’s not what’s “wrong” with you, it’s what’s wrong with our culture, honey. We are a world of “youth,” anymore. Look at how we are bombarded (almost second-by-second) by marketing!
I have no intention of ever having “work” done, especially on my face. I have earned every line and wrinkle and they are a part of me.
One of my favorite portrait subjects are the elderly. Our wizened elders have stories to tell and we can read their tribulations and triumphs in the quiet beauty of their faces.
Yay buttons !
Elderly women can “give up” after a certain age because we don’t fit the criteria for outer beauty anymore. I see this in the expressions on faces, it’s not just lines, its etched in “attitude”. someone said you deserve the face you end up with.
I think it’s worth realising God does not make “mistakes” we are meant to change and transition over back to the total mystery from which we came
So to look in the mirror and grieve the loss of the girl we once were is natural but we need to still ‘get over it’
Even in celebrity land older women are worshipped for retaining youthful features. But there are some who are beautiful without doing that…..like Jane Fonda, Judy Dench, Helen Mirren…
who can forget the beauty of Katherine Hepburn in “On Golden Pond” she was just radiant without trying..I think they retain an integrity that sadly the botched plastic surgery victims (sly Stallones mother…eeew!) and poor Joan Rivers…she has made a joke of herself in the end.
I look up to the older women who go there graciously, its not so much giving up but surrendering to spirit and death eventually (isn’t that what we are all galloping away from?) what becomes incredibly attractive is the courage to shine even if it is a glowing ember, still as beautiful or an old crimson curled up crispy leaf in autumn.
Plastic surgery is saying to the total mystery from which we came….old age is defective, wrong, embarrassing, cringe worthy….hey that sounds like a psychopathic view of humanity.
another thought..”beauty is in the eye of the beholder” the “beholders” in our cases were sociopaths/Psychopathic LIARS….so we feel they only PRETENDED we were beautiful to get what they wanted….ouch!
Katherine Hepburn is my favorite actress! And, yes, even in age she was beautiful!!!!! Henry Fonda was also very gracefully aged!
In many cultures the aged were admired fror their wisdom and experiences, but not in ours. The “reality” shows and the instant “fame” by being on TV–like those kids in California who were robbing the rich and famous and now they are FAMOUS and sought after! DUH?? HUH? WTF?
Aloha, my darling, I know you are beautiful and I have never seen your face! YOUR SOUL is beautiful!
It is odd to me that some of my best friends have been less than physically beautiful, one of my closest friends weighed over 300 pounds, and to me she was BEAUTIFUL, yet, if I weighed that much I would be so DOWN ON MYSELF. Her husband (a very nice looking man) ADORED HER!!!!
I think it is back to the we put more PRESSURE ON OURSELVES for “perfection” than we expect out of others.
We treat others better than we treat ourselves, we expect more out of ourselves than we do of others, we must be PERFECT to be OK, but others don’t have to be.
I read a book once called the Imposter Syndrome about people’s self worth. I can recall feeling like an IMPOSTOR as young as Jr. High school. I made 100% on a spelling test and the teacher complimented me on it as I was the only one who made above 90% and I sat there DEVALUING HER COMPLIMENT and thinking “Boy, do I have her FOOLED!” I didn’t even accept a compliment for an objective test of my knowledge. I felt like an imposter!!!
It is still difficult for me to accept compliments and I have to make myself stop and say, “Yes, I DESERVED that compliment” or that accolade. It isn’t about “false humility” it isn’t even about “humility” it is DEVALUATION OF SELF!
No one likes a bragart, but at the same time, why do we DEVALUE ourselves because we aren’t like some “super model?”
Why do we go about feeling INFERIOR to others and not looking at our own good points? Why are we so HARD on ourselves? I think for the very same reason we are HERE, we are HERE at LF because we devalued ourselves AND alloowed someone else to VALIDATE that opinion of ourselves.
Did we get hooked in by the P because they use the LOVE BOMB to attract us (and believe me it IS ATTRACTIVE when you hold a low opinion of yourself) and then, BOOM, they change tactics and begin to devalue us, and WE knew they were right we don’t deserve better treatment, but if we try to placte them, they’ll give us the love bomb again! Doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure that one out.
Raising our own self esteem though, and putting those negative messages of “imposter” asside is not an easy task, and the only way I know to do it is to STOP myself when I realize I am doing that! Then look at the positive sides of what I am and what I have! To value the THINGS OF REAL VALUE that are ME! My heart, my compassion, my empathy, my ability to love and care! My “mortal house” is like every other “mortal house” it is going to need repairs from time to time, and the facia is going to change, but as long as it protects me, and works, that’s okay and when it wears out, I will move on to a spiritual house, taking with me the things of REAL VALUE that I AM. Leaving behind the things that are of only temporary “beauty.”
I thought this poem, by WB Yeats might be appropriate here.
I’ve always loved it, because I’ve always dreamed of being loved like this:
When you are old and gray and full of sleep,
And nodding by the fire, take down this book,
And slowly read, and dream of the soft look
You eyes had once, and of their shadows deep.
How many loved the moments of glad grace,
And loved your beauty with love false or true;
But one man loved the pilgrim soul in you,
And loved the sorrows of your changing face.
And bending down beside the glowing bars
Murmur, a little sadly, how love fled
And paced upon the mountains overhead
And hid his face amid a crowd of stars.