I do think consistent self care rituals speaks to your belief about being worthy or not, Tupp.
I also think that practice is necessary to get new coping strategies in place... and it doesn't happen over night. It goes in spits and spats, and it's difficult to resist old more destructive habits when those were our GO TO habits for so many years.
We begin very well, then BAM! Stress hits, and the new patterns can go right out the window very easily, until we've done that often enough we recognize it, and resist or make better choices. We do that until the new habits feel more comfortable, and at some point, if we're lucky, they become habit and what becomes habit becomes pleasure, IME.
It's a process, and requires diligence as well...... sometimes we get comfortable, and it FEELS like we can handle anything, but that's not entirely true, IME.
There are phases and patterns to these things, but having a schedule that feels right is a good thing. KNOWING you'll work out at X time every X days, and keeping that can provide a general framework for everything in your life.... doing laundry, cooking, meal planning and shopping for same.
Sometimes when we drop the workout schedule, or any new habit we're working on, we might notice that everything goes a bit whonkey, and it;'s interesting for me to note that I'm not always going to feel OK, or great about keeping that new habit in place without fail. Sometimes keeping on a schedule means I have to drop into bed without performing other very comfortable rituals, but I remind myself that that's just every once in a while, and I should keep that NEW habit I'm trying to perform, even if it's at the expense of some self care rituals I have down pat, kwim?
I'm either ON or I'm going to fail, I find. Same with very healthy eating habits. I'm either ON or I'm not, and knowing that means I KNOW I have to do certain things faithfully, or just not begin till I'm committed in order to avoid negative patterns, or feeling badly about.
If it comes down to me making deals with myself, say... about gluten, then I'm not in the proper head space to make a change, IME.
At this point I do a little dairy, and maybe a bit of sugar every once in a while but I'm ZERO gluten without fail or having to think about it.
I can live that way right now, and maybe I'll go strictly ZERO dairy and sugar (reading every label and being impeccable with choices) but right now I'm under a lot of stress, and I know I'll just make myself feel bad if I try to do more than I can manage, then FAIL.
We pick our battles, lay out future goals, and set goals we can attain in this moment in order to stay facing forward, IME.
We forgive ourselves when we regress, and we're gentle and kind when we find ourselves facing the wrong direction. We do this bc being kind and gently talking ourselves in the other direction will get us where we need to be more quickly, IME, and keep us heading in that direction, IME.
The old unkind voices in our heads are the ones that turn us facing backwards, and it takes a while to identify them, figure out what and who they are, and you're doing that right now.
You're doing work on several levels which is difficult at best..... I have to put lists up in my bathroom and have them as touchstones and reminders as I begin and go through my days. They help bring me back to the path I want to be on. They help get me off old familiar paths I don't want to be on anymore.
Hops would say it's shifting into observer mode, and she's right. It IS that.... and it's also learning how to shift without self recrimination or blame or feeling we've failed. Again.
We shift, forgive and begin again until we've formed new habits, pathways in our brains, and new supporting framework around them on many levels, IME.
Sometimes the NOT KNOWING WHAT TO DO or REPLACE THE OLD WITH is part of the problem, but there;s the I'M NOT WORTHY piece and the I FEEL I SHOULD BE DOING THIS OTHER OLD PATTERN THING or DOING DOING DOING the old things that took me out of discomfort short term but now are creating problems for me in and of themselves.....
all need to be identified, addressed, hashed out and built upon or replaced entirely.
I heard a T say last week.... "All you need to do is change everything." He was joking about addicts making changes, but he was also very serious about how it feels and what IT IS to change negative coping strategies for anyone.
Also, about every member of a family being involved in any pattern....
"Everyone is guilty, and it's no one's fault."
I liked that one, though I'm still tossing it around in my head.
((((Tupp)))))
Lighter