In
order to better recover from the behavioral consequences of low self-esteem,
the SEA's program encourages you not only to utilize the SEA's Program of
Recovery but also to alter your lifestyle as well. Your current lifestyle is a
product of your low self-esteem and most probably it needs attention. The
healthier your lifestyle is, the more likely your self-esteem will be enhanced
and promoted.
The
SEA's recovery lifestyle involves the following components:
A.
Following the SEA's program of recovery - The SEA program of
recovery is fully outlined in SEA's Program
B.
Restructuring of personal time - Restructuring of personal time is
outlined in the Time Management for Recovery.
C.
Eating a balanced diet - Eating a balanced diet involves eating
three balanced, nutritious meals which are low in fat, low in cholesterol, and
at an adequate caloric intake for your height and ideal weight.
D.
Getting adequate, restful sleep - Getting adequate, restful sleep
involves six to eight hours daily of restful sleep by adequate time
management, stress reduction and relaxation activities.
E.
Daily aerobic exercise - Aerobic physical exercise of at least
twenty minutes a day involves rigorous exercise in which your heart rate and
respiration rate increase. This is discussed further in the Exercise
Program in Recovery.
F.
Maintaining physical health - Maintaining physical health involves
taking preventative actions to monitor yourself and to seek professional
medical attention when you feel sick. It involves an annual physical and other
medical reviews and check-ups as needed.
G.
Restructuring of home, work, and community involvement -
Restructuring of home, work, and community involvement requires that you
reorder your priorities to reduce workaholic tendencies, family life over
responsibility or avoidance, over involvement in outside activities and other
time wasters or stress inducers in your life.
H.
Maintaining a social support network - Social support involves
giving and receiving emotional and physical support from the relevant people
in your life. This component of a recovery lifestyle is fully explored in Social
Support in Recovery.
I.
Stress management and relaxation activities - Stress management and
relaxation activities to reduce anxiety, tension, and stress in life help you
to keep your focus on personal recovery and off the unsettling realities of
life. This concept is explored more fully in Coping with Stress
in Recovery
J.
Adequate recreational and leisure outlets - Adequate
recreational and leisure outlets are necessary for you to keep your life in
perspective. You need safe, healthy, growth-enhancing fun in your life so as
to reassure you that your efforts at recovery are worthwhile.
It
will do you no good to address just a few of the components of the Recovery
Lifestyle. They are interdependent and essential if you are to achieve a full
and lasting recovery from the behavioral consequence of your low self-esteem.
The
following Tools for a Lifestyle of Recovery are suggestions and advice on how
you can maximize the efficiency of your efforts at recovery. They are
practical, down to earth tips on lessening the urge to give up and relapse into
old ways of thinking, feeling, or acting. When you experience a struggle in
balancing all of the components of the recovery lifestyle, review these aids
to help you get back on track.