Be good to me.
Written by kyrant: Inspiring, kyran 15 Comments
While Southern California raged last month, Arkansas sulked & wept. Day after day was rainy and glum, until I just wanted to give the weather a good hard slap, tell it to buck up, get a grip for godsake.
It was the kind of autumn weather I grew up with, in Newfoundland: sullen, heavy and grey. Typical fall days in Arkansas are more like the best of a North Atlantic summer: brilliant and crisp, blessed relief from the humidity that buries us indoors from June to September, like a deep northern snow.
I had forgotten how sensitive I am to weather. One day without sun is restful. I burrow in. I make soup and bread. I feel less guilty over things I am not doing. By day two, however, the grey gets inside me. I feel listless and vaguely sad. By day three, I am in despair. Sun, oh my sun, why have you forsaken me?
I am not patient with sadness, unless it comes with a very good reason and a signed note from the doctor. I want to root out the cause, fix it, & move on. This attitude intensifies concentrically. I am more apt to be sympathetic to strangers and casual acquaintances; less so with those near & dear.
With myself, I am brutal. After nearly a week of this weather, I couldn’t stand myself. “What the hell is the matter with you,” I’d think when I looked in the bathroom mirror, or at my planner, or at my house, or at the bathroom scale. “Pull it together!”
I was about two centimeters away from my bathroom mirror, surveying my flaws, picking at flaking skin and clogged pores, when I heard a little voice say, Why are you picking on me?
I pulled back. I was picking on myself. Like the worst schoolyard bully. Sun or no sun, I had to stop being mean, and be good to me.
I had to stop & think about what that would mean. Like most people, I sometimes confuse self-kindness with self-indulgence. Eat the rest of the ice cream. You deserve it. Don’t do your work today. You need a rest. Have another drink. You’ve been so stressed. But that line of thinking is just a crooked path back to self-abuse. Like the “honeymoon” side of the wife-beater. It always smacks you down in the end.
I remembered someone who told me that after her divorce, a friend made her pack herself a thermos of hot soup for work, everyday. She said that everytime she open that thermos of steaming, homemade soup, she knew that someone really cared about her: herself.
I looked in the mirror and tried to soften my focus. I needed a shower. I would start there, and deal later with the question of whether or not I had something nice or even clean to wear, after a week of neglecting the laundry. As I stepped into the tub, I again thought about that thermos of soup. Homemade, not from a can. I thought about how I would treat one of my own precious little boys after a hard week.
I stepped back out of the tub. I dug around in the bathroom closet, and came up with one clean, fluffy towel, and a long-forgotten bottle of wisteria-scented bubble bath, with just enough left in it for one bath. I put the plug in the drain, turned both faucets open and poured it, and myself, in.
And felt like somebody really cared.
What does self-care mean to you? I’d love to have ideas stocked away for the next rainy day.
November 4th, 2007 at 4:27 pm
I know I am really taking good care of myself when I am moving my body. (running, yoga, walking, something.) Also, watching a good, classic film helps. Not crap on tv, but something with a greater impact. (on me, that is)
November 4th, 2007 at 8:35 pm
Wow, this was good to read. Thank you. I feel the depressive effects of the weather too.
I listen to music that energizes or inspires me. I eat green vegetables. Frozen peas are probably the best backup self-care I have! That and walking.
November 5th, 2007 at 6:29 am
Nice work Kyran….always thought provoking.
Being good to myself means taking myself to Scotland for a visit. Home to a place in the highlands as familiar to me as if around every corner I could find someone I had been related to for hundreds of years. Scotland feels like home in my bones even though my family of origin has been living and dying on US soil since before the American Revolution.
November 5th, 2007 at 10:42 am
I remember a friend telling me, when I was going through IVF, to talk to myself like I was my own best mother, and by that she meant, say all the things you would say to yourself if you were mothering yourself. It was such an interesting exercise to say things like, “You’re handling so much stress right now and doing such a good job of it.” And, “I’m so proud of you for doing all the research and figuring out a strong plan of action.” It was a wake-up call because at the time my internal conversation with myself wasn’t anything like that! Ever since, I’ve thought back on how much happier our world would be if we mothered ourselves more!!!
Beautiful post. Thank you so much.
November 5th, 2007 at 11:28 am
This is a timely post – I’ve been trying to take care of me a little better, too. And I’ve found that I deserve a clean house. I don’t enjoy cleaning, but I feel happier and more peaceful when I do it. And I also ought to have reading breaks to reward me for all the icky cleaning.
November 5th, 2007 at 12:47 pm
I make a bouquet. Or get a really nice scented candle.
November 5th, 2007 at 12:51 pm
Wow! Reading this really gave me a kick in the pants (oh, erm, I meant a gentle pat on the bottom) because it made me realize how mean I am to myself. Who knew? Not me.
Now I do. That means I get to be gentle with me, and really, why wait for someone else to say/do something nice for me? Who knows me better than myself? Who luvs ya baby? I do.
Thank you. Must go brush up on soup recipes now.
November 5th, 2007 at 1:44 pm
“Like most people, I sometimes confuse self-kindness with self-indulgence.”
I’ve been thinking about the truth of this observation for hours now. This is an important thing to realize, for me, at least, and I’m grateful you shared it.
November 5th, 2007 at 1:57 pm
I call my 95 year old Grammie. She has loved me all of my life. I wished I lived close enough to visit her more.
November 5th, 2007 at 2:19 pm
Have a good cry. Not the stiffled half-cry… a good cry. Let it all out, slobber, get snot on your lip… wipe your face…
And then just breathe. In and out.
November 5th, 2007 at 8:01 pm
There are many deep truths written here. Thank you.
Self care for me is movement and not hiding out.
November 6th, 2007 at 10:02 am
Thanks Kyran!
As always, you nurture my thoughts…never stop writing!
Besitos!
November 6th, 2007 at 10:43 am
Be Good to Me…
Like most people, I sometimes confuse self-kindness with self-indulgence. “Eat the rest of the ice cream. You deserve it. Don’t do your work today. You need a rest. Have another drink. You’ve been so stressed… ”
A look at what it means to tr…
November 7th, 2007 at 12:52 pm
Kyran, lovely post, as always. I listen to music when I need to be good to myself. I LOVE music and it fills me so full, but for some reason I find i hardly ever listen.
November 7th, 2007 at 9:46 pm
Yoga. Fresh flowers. A bath. My favorite book, in bed, under the afghan my best friend knitted for me. And a call to someone who loves me, and who can bear to hear me say, “I’m sad. Will you please tell me a story? Something funny?”