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Growing Down:
Tools for Healing the Inner Child
Unconditional Self-Acceptance and Self-Love
Content:
What are unconditional self-acceptance and self-love?
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.

How you feel when you accept and love yourself
unconditionally
When you are the recipient of
unconditional self acceptance and self love from yourself, you feel:
-
Free to be yourself.
-
You have value and worth.
-
Wanted and desired for you as you are rather than
for what you do.
-
Listened to and understood.
-
That you have yourself to offer others which in
itself is worthwhile.
-
Warm, cared for, and nurtured.
-
You are OK just the way you are.
-
That there is no need to wear a mask or to act in
any way just to please another.
-
Free to be yourself and to open up your feelings
with no fear of rejection or non-approval.
-
That it is possible to take the risk to be
vulnerable in order to have open and honest relationships with others.
-
No fear of retribution or reprisal from others if
you should make a mistake or experience a failure.
-
That there are no conditions set on your
relationships with yourself.

Negative consequences of the lack of unconditional
self-acceptance and self-love
When you do not give yourself
unconditional self acceptance and self love, then you:
-
Feel constrained to act in ways which are
inconsistent with your beliefs and feelings.
-
Lack the freedom to be yourself.
-
Live your life to please others rather than to
please yourself.
-
Are not given the freedom to experience the natural
consequences of your own actions and decisions.
-
Can become dependent on others to make you feel good
about yourself.
-
Can become very rule bound and perfectionistic in
seeking to do what is "right'' or "expected'' in order to be
accepted or loved by others.
-
Are more likely to experience low self-esteem and
low self worth.
-
Feel misunderstood, not approved of, and defensive.
-
Have poor relationship skills and experience failed
relationships.
-
Work harder at meeting conditions and expectations
set for you by others than working at becoming self directed, self-sufficient,
and self-reliant.
-
Can become withdrawn and isolate yourself so as to
avoid future rejection and non-approval.
-
Confuse the need to follow rules and obey directions
as the only way to be accepted and loved by others.
-
Believe that you can never fail or make a mistake
because you would never be worthy of love or acceptance.
-
Can become very self-critical, self disapproving and
self punitive.
-
Tend to set unrealistic, non-achievable, and overly
idealistic expectations for yourself which must first be met in order to
accept and love yourself.
-
Become your own worst critic who is never able to
say you are "good enough.''

Replacement beliefs to assist you accept and love
yourself unconditionally
Irrational:
You should always obey rules, accept limits, and meet your own expectations and
conditions before you can accept and love yourself.
Healthy:
Following rules, accepting limits, and meeting expectations and conditions are
often necessary for survival in this world but are not necessary conditions to
be self accepted and self loved.
Irrational:
It was right that my parents required me to obey their rules, accept limits set,
and meet their expectations and conditions before they showed acceptance and
love for me. Healthy:
My parents first needed to accept and love me because I existed. Only once I
felt this acceptance and love would I more likely obey the rules, accept limits,
and meet their expectations in a healthy way.
Irrational:
The goal in life is to scope out the "rules of the games'' in the
workplace, school, family, community, and relationships so as to gain acceptance
and love by playing the games by the rules.
Healthy:
It is politically healthy to scope out the rules of the games so as to "survive''
in the workplace, school, family, community, and relationships but such survival
does not always guarantee acceptance and love. Home, workplace, school, family,
the community, and relationships can be too sick or toxic to offer acceptance or
love even after all of the "rules'' of the game have been followed. In such
cases, you need to look outside of these environments and to yourself for the
unconditional self acceptance and self love you need to feel healthy, fulfilled,
and fully human.
Irrational:
It was impossible for my parents to discipline me and still accept and love me
unconditionally. Healthy:
It is possible to not like your behavior and actions and develop logical
consequences or disciplinary actions which you must abide by and still love and
accept you unconditionally as seen in the statement, "I accept and love you
unconditionally. It's just your behaviors which I don't like right now and it is
because I love you that I am making you experience the negative consequence of
your own actions.''
Irrational:
You must be perfect in everything you do or others will not accept or love you. Healthy:
You are a human being subject to faults, failings, and mistakes and yet you
deserve to be accepted and loved not because you are perfect but because you are
you.
Irrational:
It was good for me as a child to experience all of the negative conditions of
life in my relationships in order to grow up realistic about myself and the
world. Healthy:
The words of this poem by an unknown author state clearly that it is healthier
for you as a child to have experienced unconditional positive acceptance and
love if you are to grow up into a healthy, self loving person.
Children Learn What They Live
-
If
a child lives with criticism,
-
he
learns to condemn.
-
If
a child lives with hostility,
-
he
learns to fight.
-
If
a child lives with ridicule,
-
he
learns to feel shy.
-
If
a child lives with shame,
-
he
learns to feel guilty.
-
If
a child lives with tolerance,
-
he
learns to be patient.
-
If
a child lives with encouragement,
-
he
learns confidence.
-
If
a child lives with praise,
-
he
learns to appreciate.
-
If
a child lives with fairness,
-
he
learns justice.
-
If
a child lives with security,
-
he
learns to have faith.
-
If
a child lives with approval,
-
he
learns to like himself.
-
If
a child lives with acceptance and friendship,
-
he
learns to find love in the world.

How to unconditionally accept and love yourself
In order to unconditionally
accept and love yourself you need to:
-
Identify the conditions you force yourself to meet
before you are accepting and loving of self.
-
Analyze these conditions and expectations you set
for yourself in order to identify why they block you from being
unconditional.
-
Analyze if these conditions are reasonable,
rational, or realistic and develop healthy alternative scripts which free
you up to be more unconditional with yourself.
-
Recognize that the limits and rules of appropriate
behaviors which you expect yourself to conform to are rules for survival,
decency, getting along, coping, productivity, sense, and order but are not
the determinants of freely accepting and loving yourself.
-
Identify the necessary standards and limits of
conduct, decorum, and interaction in your home, family, school, workplace,
community activities, and relationships - standards that are politically
sound to abide by but not a legitimate basis for your acceptance and love of
self.
-
Practice eliminating any conditions as you face
yourself and attempt to accept and love yourself freely, generously, and
with no limitations.
-
Identify what fears or beliefs or behaviors keep
blocking you from being unconditional in your love and acceptance of self
and replace them with healthy alternatives.
-
Be free to verbalize your open and unconditional
acceptance of self so as to develop a new set of behavioral scripts which
become more habitual for you.
-
Emphasize with yourself that it is because you love
and accept yourself so entirely and freely that you want yourself to
experience the positive or negative consequences of your actions and the
fact that such consequences do not affect your acceptance or love of
yourself.
-
Clarify that "tough love'' is the continuous
unconditional acceptance and love of self but yet holds you to be fully
personally responsible for your own actions and the consequences of those
actions.

Steps to increase in unconditional acceptance and love
of yourself
Step 1:
Read the following poem and in your journal respond to the questions
which follow the poem.
Unconditionally Me
by Jim Messina
-
I
am who I am
-
You
cannot change me so please do not try
-
So
let up with the criticisms, put downs and attempts to make me fit your
"box" for me
-
Face
it, it is easier for you just to accept me as I am than to work at making
me who you want me to be
-
Of
course you do not have to agree with what I say or do
-
Just
accept me as the human I am
-
I
am weak, have sinned, failed, and have made many mistakes in my life
-
Hey,
that's what makes me the "unique me" that I am
-
I
will never be perfect, ideal, or the "image" you want for me
-
Accept
me for who I am as I accept you for who you are
-
Let's
have fun together and allow our "real selves" the freedom to be
"us"
-
We
can be a team of unconditional mutual love and acceptance if you relax and
let it happen
A. How well do
you unconditionally accept yourself?
B. How well do
you unconditionally love yourself?
C. What are the
conditions placed on yourself before you can accept and love yourself?
D. Why are these
conditions blocks to your freely accepting and loving yourself?
E. Are
these conditions reasonable, rational, or realistic? If not, then develop
alternative scripts to free you up to accept and love yourself.
F. What
are the rules or limits for survival, decency, getting along, coping,
productivity, and sense and order which have become confused as the determinant
conditions preventing you from unconditionally accepting and loving yourself?
G. How
well do you allow yourself to be you?
H. How
free are you to openly express feelings, admit faults and failings, and to
experience excitement and enjoyment in your life?
Step 2:
Once you have made a thorough assessment of how well you unconditionally
accept and love yourself, then you need to recognize that to increase in
unconditional acceptance and love of self opens you to be vulnerable, as John
Wood so clearly points out in this poem. Once you read it, answer in your
journal the questions that follow it.
Taking
a Risk
I will present you parts of myself slowly.
If you are patient and tender, I will open drawers that mostly stay
closed, and bring out places and people and things, sounds and smells, love and
frustrations, hopes and sadness.
Bits and pieces of life that have been grabbed off in chunks and found
lying in my hands - they have eaten their way into my heart altogether, you or I
will never see them.
-
They are me -
If you regard them lightly, deny that they are important, or worse -
judge them. I will quietly - slowly - begin to wrap them up in small pieces of
velvet, like worn silver and gold jewelry, tuck them away in a small wooden
chest of drawers and close them away.
A. How do the following fears or behaviors block
your ability to unconditionally accept and love yourself?
-
Fear of taking a risk
-
Inability to trust
-
Insecurity
-
Fear of being
vulnerable
-
Fear of failure
-
Need for approval
-
Fear of rejection
-
Inability to identify
feelings
-
Inability to forgive yourself
-
Inability to
establish intimacy
B. How does perfectionism and the need to be exact,
right, or correct hinder your ability to be unconditional in your acceptance and
love of self?
C. How would an increase in faith and development of
your spirituality with your Higher Power assist you to be more unconditional in self acceptance
and self loving?
D. What are those things you would lose if you
unconditionally accepted and loved yourself? What would you gain or recapture?
E. What new beliefs and behaviors do you need to
develop in order to be able to unconditionally accept and love self?
F. How would you practice "Tough Love'' for
yourself and how would this new approach free you to be more unconditional in
your acceptance and love for self?
G. What are the blocks which up to now kept you from
allowing yourself to experience the natural consequences of your own actions?
H. How did your need to protect yourself from making
a mistake or experiencing a failure prevent you from freely accepting and loving
yourself?
J. How comfortable are you now with yourself to
begin to be more unconditional with your acceptance and love?
Step 3:
Once you have looked at the blocks to being unconditional in your self acceptance
and self love, then begin to practice this new behavior with yourself.
Step 4:
If you are still experiencing difficulty in being unconditional in your self acceptance
and self love, then return to Step 1 and begin again.

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