Self Improvement > Self-Judgment Versus Self-Compassion
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Article rating : 0.00, 0 votes. Author : Margaret Paul, Ph.D.
We hear a lot about how important it is to be compassionate toward
others, and it is very important. The problem is that you may not be able
to really feel compassion toward others until you are able to feel
compassionate toward yourself.
In the 37 years that I’ve been doing counseling, I’ve discovered that the
most common underlying cause of anxiety, depression, addictive
behavior and relationship problems is self-judgment. The most
prevalent self-judgment is:
“I’m not good enough.”
There are many variations to this core shame belief:
“I’m not lovable.”
“I’m unworthy.”
“I’m flawed.”
“I’m not important.”
“I’m bad.”
“I’m a failure.”
“I’m stupid.”
“I’m not okay.”
“I’m not enough.”
However you phrase it, it is saying the same thing. It is a profound
judgment against who you really are. And it is the opposite of self-
compassion.
The moment we judge ourselves, we are telling ourselves that we have
no good reasons for our feelings and behavior – that we are just not
good enough. Yet our feelings and behavior always come from our
belief system. When we are feeling badly and behaving in unloving
ways toward ourselves and others, it is always because we are
operating from false beliefs about ourselves and others.
If, instead of judging ourselves for our feelings and behavior, we were to
move into compassion for ourselves, we would open the door to
learning about the beliefs that are causing our pain.
What is your first response when someone blames you for something?
Do you judge yourself or judge the other person, or both? What
happens when you judge yourself or the other person? The chances are
that the interaction is not a healthy one.
What would happen if, when someone blames you for something, you
opened to compassion for your feelings of being blamed?
Let’s take an example of how different an interaction would be with self-
compassion rather than self-judgment. In the following interaction, John
attacks Mary for being over-drawn in their checking account. In the first
example, Mary goes into self-judgment. In the second example, Mary
goes into self-compassion.
John: Mary, we are overdrawn in our account again because you forgot
to enter some of the checks. What is the matter with you? Are you
stupid?
Mary: (thinks to herself, “I’m stupid. I can never do anything right.” Then
she defends herself and attacks John). I just forgot. What’s the big deal?
I’ve been too busy taking care of your stuff. If you would do more around
the house, I wouldn’t forget things like that.
John and Mary end up in a fight.
John: Mary, we are overdrawn in our account again because you forgot
to enter some of the checks. What is the matter with you? Are you
stupid?
Mary: (Mary tunes into how badly it feels to be attacked by John. She
has compassion for her own feelings of sadness and loneliness at being
attacked by someone whose love is important to her). John, this feels
awful inside. My stomach hurts when you attack me like this. I’m willing
to talk with you about the checkbook, but not when you are attacking me.
Please let me know when you are ready to talk with me about this
without blaming me.
Because Mary moved into compassion for her own feelings, she was
able to respond to John in a way that was loving to herself and to him.
Moving out of self-judgment and into self-compassion takes much
practice. Most of us have been practicing self-judgment for so long that it
has become our automatic way of being. It takes much consciousness to
move into self-compassion, but with practice you can move out of your
automatic judgmental thought and into a conscious compassionate
thought.
This one change in your thinking will create huge positive changes in
your life!
Margaret Paul, Ph.D. is the best-selling author and co-author of eight
books, including "Do I Have To Give Up Me To Be Loved By You?" and
“Healing Your Aloneness.” She is the co-creator of the powerful Inner
Bonding healing process. Learn Inner Bonding now! Visit her web site
for a FREE Inner Bonding course: http://www.innerbonding.com or email her
at margaret@innerbonding.com Phone Sessions Available.
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