By Mike Robbins
I had the honor of meeting author Robert Holden
recently when we both spoke at the Hay House IGNITE event in San Jose,
CA (which was an amazing experience, by the way). Robert is someone
whom I’ve admired for quite some time. It was wonderful to get a chance
to meet him in person and hear him speak live. In his talk, he said
“There’s no amount of self improvement that can make up for a lack of
self acceptance.”
This statement really struck me and as I started to think about it
more, I realized that so much of my life and my work is focused on self
improvement. And while there’s nothing wrong with me or any of us
wanting to improve ourselves – too often we go about it erroneously
thinking that if we “achieve” the “improvement” we’re after, we’ll then
feel good about ourselves. As Robert pointed out in his talk (and most
of us have experienced this in our lives many times), it doesn’t work
this way.
We live in a culture that is obsessed with self improvement. We turn
on the TV, look at magazines, take classes, read books, listen to
others, surf the web and more – constantly getting various messages that
if we just fixed, changed, and improved ourselves a bit, we’d be better
off. How often do you find yourself thinking some version of, “If I
just lost a little weight, made a little more money, improved my health,
had more inspiring work, lived in a nicer place, improved my
relationships (or something else), then I’d be happy.” Even though I
“know better,” this type of thinking shows up inside my own head more
often than I’d like.
The paradox of self improvement is that by accepting ourselves as we
are, we give ourselves the space, permission, and opportunity to create
an authentic sense of success and fulfillment. When we insatiably focus
on improving ourselves, thinking that it will ultimately lead us to a
place of happiness, we’re almost always disappointed and we set up a
stressful dynamic of constantly striving, but never quite getting there.
What if we gave ourselves permission to accept ourselves fully, right
now? While this is a simple concept, it’s one of the many things in
life that’s easier said than done. One of the biggest pieces of
resistance we have regarding self acceptance is that we erroneously
think that by accepting ourselves, we may somehow be giving up. It’s as
if we say to ourselves, “Okay, I’ll accept myself, once all of my
problems and issues go away.”
Another reason we resist accepting ourselves is the notion that
somehow acceptance is resignation. It’s not. Acceptance is acceptance –
it’s about allowing things to be as they are, even if we don’t like
them. As Byron Katie says (and I often quote), “When you argue with
reality you lose, but only 100% of the time.”
The paradox of self acceptance is that when we allow ourselves to
accept who we are, where we are, what’s really happening, qualities
about ourselves, aspects of who we are, and more – we actually set
ourselves up and give ourselves the opportunity to make changes,
improvements, and enhancements to ourselves and our lives in an
authentic way. When we obsess about and/or demand these improvements or
changes “in order to” be happy, feel good about ourselves, or think
we’re successful, it almost never works.
If you take a moment right now to think about some of the most
important improvements and changes you’re attempting to make in your
life, ask yourself this question, “What would it look like, feel like,
and be like for me to fully accept myself in these important areas of my
life?”
Most of the time it’s our own self criticism, perfection demands, and
impatience that are actually getting in our way of making the changes,
creating the success, and experiencing the fulfillment we truly want.
What if we changed our approach and with as much love, compassion, and
vulnerability as possible, just accepted ourselves exactly as we are,
right now!
http://mike-robbins.com/self-improvement-vs-self-acceptance/
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