MyFinalRest
Bluelighter
...I hear this a lot: "you have to learn how to love yourself before you can love others" etc.
I've honestly never been there...you know, to a point where I couldn't treat other people well because I "didn't love myself."
What is everybody talking about? What's wrong with so many people that they have to spend such an inordinate amount of time "learning to love and accept themselves" before they can have a decent relationship with someone else?
I never really think about whether or not I love or hate myself. It just doesn't click in my brain to describe a "relationship" with myself as if I was talking about someone else. It's definitely 3rd person language here.
Is it like you see yourself from the outside but you feel like you have no control over what you do and then, you have to decide whether you like or dislike yourself? Is it some lack of wholeness or coordination between your values and your actions?
In relationships, this particular statement - learn to love yourself so you can love others - seems like taking a vertical approach to a horizontal relationship. The direction of the advice isn't going to send you closer to someone else...
Maybe if you really don't love yourself, you need to quickly find out why and take control over your actions? I've certainly done things I regret, will probably some more things I regret, and I acknowledge that I'm not a perfectly made human being, but this doesn't keep me from being able to give and recieve love and value someone else's feelings.
So, please explain this phenomenon to me...why is this "relationship" with yourself preventing you from having a good relationship with someone else?
I've honestly never been there...you know, to a point where I couldn't treat other people well because I "didn't love myself."
What is everybody talking about? What's wrong with so many people that they have to spend such an inordinate amount of time "learning to love and accept themselves" before they can have a decent relationship with someone else?
I never really think about whether or not I love or hate myself. It just doesn't click in my brain to describe a "relationship" with myself as if I was talking about someone else. It's definitely 3rd person language here.
Is it like you see yourself from the outside but you feel like you have no control over what you do and then, you have to decide whether you like or dislike yourself? Is it some lack of wholeness or coordination between your values and your actions?
In relationships, this particular statement - learn to love yourself so you can love others - seems like taking a vertical approach to a horizontal relationship. The direction of the advice isn't going to send you closer to someone else...
Maybe if you really don't love yourself, you need to quickly find out why and take control over your actions? I've certainly done things I regret, will probably some more things I regret, and I acknowledge that I'm not a perfectly made human being, but this doesn't keep me from being able to give and recieve love and value someone else's feelings.
So, please explain this phenomenon to me...why is this "relationship" with yourself preventing you from having a good relationship with someone else?