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It starts with you. It starts with the relationship you have with yourself. And how you treat yourself is how you treat the other person. Everything that you do, you mirror on to everyone else. A healthy relationship is someone who takes full responsibility for themselves. Someone who holds true accountability for each action they take or have made. And someone who sees themselves as the glass full.
We do point out what we see the most in a person, especially traits we don't like, simply because we already see it in ourselves. Rather you admit to it, the only reason why you noticed is that it feels and sounds familiar. And since most common unhealthy traits are developed in a beginner stage of growing, we subconsciously adapt to those traits. So let's take a look at how a healthy relationship looks like.
Here are the 8 ways to build a healthy relationship with yourself.
Respect is denying what you are not willing to do. Respect is putting your happiness and obligations first. By choosing to not put yourself in situations that are harmful to your energy and state of mind, you are honoring your boundaries. You are showing the world exactly how you want to be treated. This is the most crucial sign of a healthy relationship because it is one of the legs on the table that keeps your integrity.
Setting boundaries is similar to when your parents use to tell you what to do and what not to do. Except for this time, you are both the mother and the father, giving orders and restrictions in your life. By giving yourself limitations, for example, on consuming too much food, or staying out too late, will help improve the relationship between yourself.
It will also build your listening qualities by strengthening the connection with your intuition. You are more in control which eliminates another's input or a 2nd opinion. And by listening to yourself through the boundaries you set, you are honoring that your time is valuable, and so is your health.
This has to be shown within you first as a sign of a healthy start. You’ll know once you start taking responsibility for your actions and even situations you involve yourself in. Rather or not it has to do with you entirely, making the realization that you put yourself in situations, is being honest and staying away from playing the victim. You are in charge of where you put yourself. And by taking accountability, you are building that healthy relationship.
By being completely honest with yourself, will show you how to accept your mistakes and how to learn then grow from them. By being honest with yourself, you also open your heart to being vulnerable; opening to sharing your past experiences instead of running from them. This will help you face head-on what lies within yourself. By addressing who and what has hurt you, you release the baggage which then helps you to move forward. This is the 3rd leg that helps the table stand up.
This is what keeps you in alignment with yourself; with who you are as a person who is evolving each day. By exposing what you were feeling ashamed of or feeling fearful of, you are releasing yourself from that experience emotionally. Truth plays a big part in a healthy relationship with yourself.
Also considered this as a maturity leveling and as you continue to grow, you help those around do the same. In other words, if they are going through something unexpected, here's your chance to help them out. Certain life experiences will test to see how healthy your relationship with yourself is.
And If you are going through some turbulence, that's okay because it is needed. A healthy relationship will not be healthy if there weren’t any challenges to make it stronger. And how you overcome it matters the most. What you choose to say to yourself will either motivate you or slow you down so choose your words carefully.
You need alone time to gather your thoughts; to filter out what is no longer needed. Without other voices in your ear, you are able to set your own rules and follow through with what you have to do. This will give you clarity on who you are as a person and which direction you need to go next.
By being still and being within your own energy, you tap more into yourself by listening to the 1st voice inside your mind. The 1st voice is usually the voice that comes from your intuition. It's the voice that tells you what you should do. By listening more to yourself you create a strong bond.
If you are ever in a moment of self-doubt or indecisiveness, ask your question out loud then proceed with your daily tasks. Within your day, the answer will reveal to you. By occupying the present moment, you allow thoughts to filter through. Spending time alone not only creates a piece of mind, but it brings you into awareness of your state of being.
By realizing you are doing the best that you can, you eliminate the worry of becoming a hard-time perfectionist. There will be days where everything is turned upside down, and the key thing to remember is you are solely doing the best that you can. It's okay to have days where things don't go accordingly. How you treat yourself at the end though, matters the most.
Keep a reminder that tomorrow is always a brand new day. Along with compassion, comes patience. Rome wasn't built in a day, and I'm sure it took time for The Great Wall of China to be completed. By giving yourself words of encouragement, will help with your confidence and determination. Being kind to yourself goes a long way.
It’s a reminder of the work you put in. The physical body is the most overworked and sometimes taken for granted. Show up for yourself by giving your body the break it needs.
Relaxation may seem like getting a massage, taking a day off to sit down, or even taking a nap! It's important to rest your body and your mind. Recharging from the outside noise of people, places and things will help reconnect you back to yourself.
In order to build a healthy relationship with yourself, you must learn how to forgive yourself for the major and minor things that you’ve done. Understand that life is a learning experience and mistakes need to happen in order to learn something new. What insight did you take away after having that argument, or disagreement?
Even with misunderstandings, find out what you can take away from it instead of holding on to it. Forgiveness helps keep the truth and honesty within yourself. When you have a healthy relationship with yourself, you have a healthy relationship with others.
It is up to you, however, to discover those traits and make some life adjustments. It takes honesty, consistency, and the mind power to want to form a healthy relationship with yourself. And if all the boxes check off, then you are on the right path! Continue a healthy relationship with yourself by putting yourself first. This is one thing you can do right now that will help you connect to yourself and grow right away.
I really connect with the part about self-forgiveness. It's taken me years to stop beating myself up over past mistakes.
The section on alone time resonates deeply with me. I've found my best decisions come when I take time to just be with my thoughts.
Not sure I agree that we all see our own traits in others. Sometimes people just have genuinely annoying habits that have nothing to do with us.
After reading this, I realized I need to work on setting better boundaries. I always say yes to everything and end up exhausted.
This article makes it sound so simple, but building self-respect is really hard when you've grown up without good examples.
I've been practicing self-care lately and it's amazing how much better my relationships with others have become too.
The point about honesty being key really hit home. I spent years lying to myself about being happy in my career before making a change.
Interesting perspective but I think some people are naturally more self-aware than others. It's not always about building these skills.
Anyone else struggle with the alone time part? I find it really uncomfortable to be by myself.
Your comment about alone time caught my attention. Try starting with just 10 minutes a day. It gets easier with practice.
This article feels too focused on individual work. Sometimes we need professional help to build a healthy relationship with ourselves.
The trust part is crucial. I never realized how much I didn't trust my own judgment until I started working on it.
Love the comparison to building the Great Wall of China. Good reminder that personal growth takes time.
I wonder if setting boundaries is harder for women? Society often teaches us to be people pleasers.
Actually implementing these ideas is the hard part. Reading about them is easy but doing them is another story.
The part about self-respect really speaks to me. I've started saying no to things that drain my energy.
Anyone found specific techniques for building self-trust? I'm struggling with this one.