Life is frequently not easy, and we often
encounter problems and difficulties that require us to pay attention to
our own feelings.
Relationships, whether with family, spouses and
partners, friends or even colleagues, can create emotional fallout that
we need to take care of. In addition, if we want to maintain emotional
health and balance; create as much happiness as possible in life; and
maintain serenity or inner peace;
our emotions require care.
Physical and Emotional Hygiene
Most of
us learned things about bodily hygiene and health in school and at home
from our parents: wash behind your ears, brush and floss your teeth,
wash your body and your hair on a regular basis; as well as washing
your hands frequently to minimize your exposure to viruses and germs.
Eating well, sleeping and exercising can be considered part of hygiene
- maintaining good health. To do this well, you do these healthy things
on a regular basis - once in a while isn't effective for creating good
health.
Emotional hygiene works in a similar way. Most of my
clients are surprised to learn that their emotions, too, need daily
care to maintain optimum balance. Just as consistent showering,
hand-washing and tooth-brushing can help you maintain physical health
and well-being and reduce your time in the doctor and dentist's office,
emotional hygiene can help you maintain emotional well-being and reduce
the need for therapy, prescriptions and stress-related problems.
Here are some recommendations for daily emotional hygiene:
1. Meet Yourself
Whether
you realize it or not, the relationship you have with yourself sets the
pattern for how you connect with others. By developing a nurturing way
to relate to yourself, you create a personal experience of both giving
and receiving friendship.
Checking in with yourself on a daily
basis, knowing how you feel and what you think about whatever is going
on in your life will make you happier and reduce your stress. Being
kind to yourself and having a good relationship with you gives you a
paradigm to follow which will make all your relationships with other
people go more smoothly.
Understanding your feelings helps you
make appropriate choices in every phase of your life. A big advantage
of knowing who you are is knowing how to pamper and comfort yourself
when you're stressed or tired.
Use what you have learned about your style to develop a style for recharging and relaxing:
What makes you most comfortable?
What soothes you?
What helps you recharge?
It
can be anything from a bubble bath, a yoga session, or your favorite
music to a long walk in the country, a phone conversation with your
best friend, or a nap. Make a list of your favorite "personal
rechargers". Make sure the list includes simple things you can do
cheaply (such as relax with a cup of tea and read a favorite book) to
things that are very special (such as spend a day at a bed and
breakfast or have a massage and a facial). Keep the list where you can
refer to it whenever you feel in need of a recharge, and make use of it
often.
Some people believe being a good friend to yourself is
selfish, but you'll discover that it's really the opposite, because if
you maintain your internal friendship, it becomes easier to be a good
friend to others, and to recognize when others are good friends to you.
2. Clear out resentment and bitterness:
Clinging
to resentment can be very destructive. Resentment comes from not
wanting to take responsibility for yourself: you've been disappointed,
but you don't want to really acknowledge it, and you also don't want to
do the work of choosing a new goal, so you avoid it by wallowing in
self-pity. If what happened to that you're resenting mimics a previous
trauma, or your worst nightmare (you've been betrayed -- again ),
you're more likely to sink into bitterness. It's a self-fulfilling
prophecy, and it feels like you're doomed. It's a mental mechanism keep
you from having to grow up.
Here's how to get over resentment and bitterness:1. Swear off guilt: Guilt is like time payments you can keep suffering forever. Instead, do the grieving you need to do, figure out how you helped create the problems (or accepted them) and decide to change what didn't work before. Grieve all you need, but don't exaggerate your feelings.
2. Don't assign blame: If you blame someone else, you'll eventually turn that blame on yourself. So, instead of blaming, find some more neutral things to say "We saw things differently" "I gave it my best shot, but it didn't work."
3. Focus on re-building your life: Resentment is not practical it's a negative fantasy. Focus on the practical things you need to do and think. Get your emotional, personal and financial life together as soon as you can. Think about all the things you've been freed up to do, and do some of them. Try things you would never have done before, or things you've always wanted to do. It's been said that living well is the best revenge. Use the energy from your anger and grief, and channel them into doing things just for you. Try out for the play at the local theater, take dancing lessons or an art class, learn to scuba dive, get a pet, or plant a garden. Develop a support group for people with a similar problem. All of those things will keep you focused on the present and the future, instead of the past.
3. Maintain your happiness:
Do
what you can to bring as much happiness as possible to yourself and
others. Being happy is undeniably good for you: the endorphins it
releases reduce stress and pain, and boost your health and immune
system. It also makes you glad to be alive and pleasant to be around.
There are three things you can do to create more happiness in your life:1. Gratitude: Remember to notice and be thankful for whatever you have, what your friends, family and partner do for and give to you.
2. Generosity: Giving to others, especially giving thanks and kindness will make you happy, because most others will give back.
3. Ethics: Living your life according to a set of ethics that make sense to you will make you feel good about yourself, and increase your happiness.
4. Set aside regular time for yourself:
Me
time is important for nurturing your relationship with yourself. It is
proof that you care about yourself, just as when your friend or partner
spends time with you, you feel cared about. Take it as seriously as
your business appointments or dates with other people you love. One day
a week, I go swimming at the gym, then take myself out for a healthy
lunch at a favorite restaurant. I almost never skip this, and I don't
invite anyone to join me. It's my time for me, and it helps me stay on
an even keel.
5. Spend time with people you love
Being
with people you care about and who care about you is a great way to
affirm your value as a person, and to confirm that your life has
meaning and purpose. Make sure you take good care of your friendship
and family relationships. It's a great way to take care of you.
Emotional maintenance means thinking about your emotional health and
staying in touch with your feelings. You, too, can have renewed hope
and energy, and that's my wish for you.
Emotional Hygiene
Reviewed by Ann
on
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