Utilizing Our Values To Make Peace With Our Bodies And A Few Simple Practices To Add Into Your Day
Hi everyone and happy, happy Spring! I am so excited to be writing a blog post that has been on my heart lately and has been very present in my work with women struggling with their body image.
Often times the women I work with tell me how hating their bodies is keeping them from living the life they want. Much of the session is spent describing the prison they feel like they are living in due to all of their body dissatisfaction. They describe their image of their bodies as “fat and ugly” and because of this image, they tell me that they don’t give themselves permission to go on dates, go out to dinner with friends, go on vacation, relax and rest, or apply for the job they really want. They tell me that when their head hits the pillow at night, they assess their day and themselves based on whether or not they “stuck to their diet” and if so, then it was a good day and they are therefor “good, successful, healthy, responsible, happy, etc.” And if they did not meet their rigid rules around food and exercise that day, the day sucked and they deem themselves “bad, failures, lazy, undisciplined, etc.” I feel such deep empathy for this space. I know what it is like to be so focused on our bodies that it feels like nothing else we do matters. But when we focus on the size of our thighs as opposed to the size of our hearts we miss out on what life has to offer and equally as sad, the world misses out on what we have to offer it! All of our creativity, love, kindness, and unique gifts are not shared with the world and those around us, which is such a loss!
In my opinion, true healing of our body image is actually not about loving how our bodies look in the way it is often portrayed on social media. Although I love and support body positivity and women genuinely proclaiming “I love my body! I feel beautiful!” I think that if this is our ultimate goal or our route to healing, it can often keep us stuck. Healing our relationship with our bodies and ultimately ourselves is actually about placing less value on our appearance. True body image work is about centering our lives around our core values and what deeply matters to us and remembering that our bodies are just our vehicles to live out these values in the world. Then when we go to sleep at night we can evaluate our days and how we perceive ourselves based on whether or not our actions are in alignment with our values. Living in alignment brings a deep sense of peace, confidence, and groundedness that far exceeds anything that a number on scale can tell us about ourselves.
You may be saying, “Cool Liz, that sounds great but it also sounds really big and vague and, like, how do I do it??” I have a few quick tips to guide you in intentionally choosing to focus your every day thoughts and behaviors on your values and begin living a life outside of the body dissatisfaction prison.
A practice I ask almost every one of the women I work with to do is a values assessment. In this culture we are rewarded for accomplishing goals- did we get good grades, go to college, get a new job, get married, etc. These are all “tangible things we can check off a list” however, values are not so tangible. Values are like a direction we are moving in, a destination we never meet. For example, we are going north (towards our value of connection) and on that path we might pass some landmarks (like going to a friend’s birthday even though we aren’t feeling great in our body, having children, etc.) but even after we pass those landmarks we stay on the road going north towards the destination, our value of connection, because it is what truly matters to us and guides our life. Because we don’t spend as much time talking about our values as we do our goals, we might not know what our personal value set is so I absolutely encourage you to explore this. There are lots of great free resources online to assesses our values, this one is one of my favorites:
Values Assessment and Practice
I have also implemented a practice into my daily life this year that I teach many of the women I work with too. At the start of each day, as I am driving to work, I set a short intention out loud about which of my values I want to focus on that day (yes, people driving on the road think I’m talking to myself : )). For example, this morning I said, “today I want to find enjoyment throughout the day, express kindness to myself and others, and be present with gratitude.” Then when I get to work I write myself a post-it note and place it on my desk next to my computer so that I see it throughout the day as a gentle reminder about what is important to me. The post-it note just says my values, “Kindness. Enjoyment. Gratitude.” As I am wrapping up in the evening, I look at the post-it and list out-loud the ways throughout the day in which I was joyful, kind, and grateful. And I make sure to note all the little things too! I was kind to the barista at the coffee shop, I was grateful for the heater in my car and my delicious bagel, I enjoyed laughing with one of my clients about iPhones autocorrecting our curse words. This practice has deeply helped me to live a more intentional life on a daily basis and it has really helped me to live out my big values in small ways– and that feels so satisfying and nourishing to me. Women that I work with have shared that this practice has genuinely helped reduce their evaluations of themselves based on their bodies as well as how often they are even thinking about their bodies because they are living and enjoying their lives more fully aligned to their values. I hope that you give this a try too and remember that your values and what you have to offer the world is so much more important than the size of the vehicle you were given to do that!
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