Well, we’re one month into the New Year. How are you doing? Do you feel “new”? Did you make any resolutions? Did you break them yet? And here comes Valentine’s Day right around the corner.For many, this holidy is truly a joyous occasion–an opportunity to make that little (or big) extra effort to show someone you really care, you really love ’em. For others, it’s a dreaded day: whether you don’t have a “significant” other, you’re going through relationship “challenges,” or you just can’t seem to get on board with the whole “Hallmark” feel of it. When was the last time you took yourself on a date?Is it possible the best indicator of whether Valentine’s Day–or any day for that matter–is a joyful opportunity to love is: have I loved myself first? We’ve all paid lip service to the platitude “you have to love yourself before you love someone else.” But do we really believe it? Do we really live it? Or do we live like the famous line in “Jerry Maguire”–waiting for someone to “complete me”? But “I love him/her more than I love myself.” Does that sound noble… or sad?I’m not speaking as someone who has mastered self-love. I’m speaking as a fellow journeyer. I’ve been married almost five years now and, I can tell you, keeping love alive isn’t always easy. I’m also recognizing that I really want to learn to love others more deeply and to receive others’ love more deeply. If you’re like me and you’ve ever had trouble taking a compliment, accepting help, or letting love in, it’s likely there some residue of unworthiness lodged in our hearts, keeping us from fully loving ourselves and, therefore, from fully loving one another.We use the term “significant other.” What about “significant self”? Sounds funny, doesn’t it? As if to love ourselves still sounds conceited, self-centered, and narcissitic. I like the saying “I am my only life partner.” In essence, I am married to myself whether I like it or not–there’s no real divorcing myself–so I might as well continue to work on this primary relationship with me… while I continue to offer the best I have of my love to others. There’s also the saying “we are all one, we’re all connected.” To the degree I embrace this as true, it seems to follow as a goal or intention to treat others as I would like to be treated and vice-versa.We’re not taught much about self-love or self-care. Our bodies, minds and spirits are truly temples. Nobody’s perfect. I don’t love myself perfectly and I haven’t yet loved anybody else perfectly–if I’m perfectly honest. But I’m really starting to get that the degree to which I can love anybody unconditionally is largely contingent on how able I am to love myself unconditionally. Even when it seems I treat others better than I treat myself, it has often felt as if I’ve tried to love someone hard enough to make myself feel good enough, worthy of their love. It’s a sad but common game. Actually, I’ve heard it said that the phrase “unconditional love” is redundant: love, by definition, is unconditional… anything else is not love.One of my other favorite aphorisms is by Peter Rengel from his book “Living Life in Love”: “Loving yourself is accepting yourself, especially when you are not accepting yourself.” Take addictions, for example. Who would deny that at some level, addictions are a form of self-destruction, self-punishment, self-hatred? Certainly, we fall into these cycles and have great challenges, pulling themselves out even when we are hurting and claim to want help. But, I believe, what keeps us from stopping smoking, overeating, overdrinking, overspending–you name it–is that the fuel for our madness hasn’t yet been siphoned out of our tanks; that fuel, deep down, is self-loathing. And the more I hate myself for falling into an addiction in the first place, the more my addiction gets a stranglehold on me.Often, asking for help is the key because someone can lend a hand and remind me I am loveable and assist me in my journey toward greater self-acceptance and self-love. If I am accepting and loving myself at a high level, it is unlikely I would do anything to harm myself physically, emotionally, financially, and spiritually.We might just take note of the ways in which we recognize we aren’t loving ourselves. The point isn’t to further beat up on ourselves but, to take honest account of where we’re out of integrity. Again, be ready to share with someone or ask for help. Ultimately, the best gift we can give ourselves and our loved ones is taking good care of ourselves. We know this is true.So, this Valentine’s Day, I plan on doing something special for my wife to let her know I love her. Of course, I hope she knows that already–the holiday is just another opportunity to be creative in expressing it. But even before I put my focus on her, I am already checking in with how I’m loving me. I am giving myself the gift of exercise, eating well, taking down time, asking for help when needed, easing up on my perfectionism, and just patting myself on the back for being a good person at heart. I’m also planning on giving myself some kind of little treat for Valentine’s Day to “pay myself first,” to fill my tank full of love so that it spills over to others.I encourage each of us to send ourselves a Valentine to remember. |