What Happened When I Learned to Belong to Myself First
What might happen in your own life if you could trust yourself? If you could release what doesn’t matter? If you could stop looking outside yourself to see if you’re being and doing enough?
Pleasing the World vs. Pleasing Yourself
We are wired to be tuned into others, to want to belong, to assimilate to the group. There’s nothing wrong with that—to a point. But when we get so lost in that noise that we forget how to please ourselves, then we have a problem. That’s when our light starts to dim.
Why Your Self-Care Isn’t Working for You
5 or 15 or 45 minutes of time for yourself is not going to fix your problem if you’re spending the other 16ish waking hours of your day trying to be all things to all people and striving to meet impossible standards.
The You are Awesomesauce Playlist
Because some days you need someone like Lizzo or P!nk or India.Arie to remind you that you are perfect, just as you are.
Leaning Into Darkness & Light
This year has taught me again and again that we contain multitudes. We are living contradictions, vessels for both darkness and light, and we deny ourselves the wholeness of our experience when we consistently push one away.
Putting Your Fears in the Back Seat
I’m putting what matters most to me in the driver’s seat. My fear and my worry are invited to come along for the ride (there’s really no stopping them). But they aren’t allowed to take the wheel.
Your Election Self-Care Plan
You’ve got a plan for voting (and you’ve likely already voted!). Do you have a plan for how you’re going to take care of yourself next week?
Managing Decision Drain
Hemming and hawing about the choices we need to make—or second guessing our decisions once they’ve been made—is a massive drain of our energy. Here are some strategies you can try to take the drain out of decisions.
The Power of Play
“The opposite of play is not work; the opposite of play is depression.” - Dr. Stuart Brown
The Hidden Beliefs Keeping You Stuck
When we’re stuck and we don’t know why—or when we’re swimming in a sea of second-guessing ourselves—odds are good that there’s a hidden belief that’s getting in our way.