Tag: self care

  • From Striving to Self-Compassion

    From Striving to Self-Compassion

    For most of my life, I prayed for strength; now I find myself praying for gentleness. I used to believe that if I just tried harder, life would finally work — and maybe I’d finally be thinner. But sooner or later, effort becomes its own kind of exhaustion.

    I have come to learn that our bodies are designed to help us survive challenge, not to live in constant pursuit of it. When we push hard for long periods, our stress hormone cortisol stays elevated. At first it fuels motivation and alertness, but over time it begins to work against us. High cortisol can disrupt other hormones such as insulin, thyroid, and estrogen. It tells the body to store fat and hold on to energy “just in case.”

    For those of us living with autoimmune conditions, this constant stress signal can confuse the immune system, intensifying inflammation and fatigue. I have come to see that this is not just theory. It is the very pattern I find myself caught in, and it only adds to the stress I am trying to escape.

    What begins as determination can quietly become depletion. The harder we try to control, the more our bodies interpret life as unsafe. Muscles tighten. Sleep fragments. Digestion slows. The healing systems start to switch off. It helps to remember that this is not a moral failure; it is simply biology asking for safety.

    When we begin to interrupt that loop by resting, breathing, and nourishing ourselves kindly, something sacred happens. Cortisol steadies. Hormones rebalance. The immune system begins to trust again. Compassion becomes chemistry. Gentleness becomes medicine.

    I am learning that growth doesn’t always come from pushing harder. It’s not easy, especially when you’ve spent a lifetime equating effort with worth. Yet the work now is asking me to be quieter; to listen more deeply to the wisdom of the body, the whispers of the Spirit, and the longing for peace and a non-hustling life.

    I have often called out to God when I am at the end of my rope. Lately I am discovering that He meets me within these limits, not just at the end of them. He is not the One who demands more, but the One who abides when we can’t do more.

    So the next time we catch ourselves looping, planning, pushing, or punishing ourselves for not changing fast enough, let’s pause instead.
    Take a breath.
    Ask softly, “What might kindness look like here?”

    What if the truest transformation doesn’t happen through force but through gentleness? And the work is the steady turning from self-criticism to self-companionship; from striving to trust.

    If we traded willpower for wonder, what might we change?

    Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay

    Grace begins where striving ends.

  • The importance of the pause

    The importance of the pause

    I have been silent for the last couple of weeks.  I have struggled to find the mental capacity for creative thoughts. Some days after work I do not feel like speaking. When I start writing I struggle to string together a coherent sentence let alone a creative one.  For those close to me, it is hard to believe that I have run out of words.  Perhaps the words are there but I have needed to pause for a moment. Self-care has become a priority.  

    When I stop thinking and planning long enough, I begin to feel. And when I allow myself to feel, that feels like grief. I have been sad for all the fractured lives I encounter during my working week.  Sad for the fact I cannot possibly do enough to help everyone I meet. I am sad too, because my own life as a teen parallels some of the lives of the teens I hang out with.  Memories I have chosen to ignore or were locked away have come trickling back, mixed with delayed grief and sobering realisations.  I cry for another time and I cry for now.  I cry for others and I cry for me. 

    Some days I just want to hide away and live a quiet life. I have even thought about quitting being a grown up and go back to being a kid. Then I read quotes like this one; “Do not be daunted by the enormity of the world’s grief. Do justly, now.  Love mercy, now. You are not obligated to complete the work, but neither are you free to abandon it. “(attributed to the Talmud)

    And so, I work out, I run, I rest, I read, I take care of myself, I pray and draw strength from the God I follow.  There is so much work to do, that there is not enough of me or the week to finish it all.  Rather than abandon it all together, I do what I can, and ask the Lord to multiply all that I can humanly offer.  If he could multiply loaves and fishes to feed the hungry, why can’t he multiply the little I offer to help others? 

    Self-care often feels selfish.  But as Eleanor Brown says “Self-care is not selfish. You cannot serve from an empty vessel.”  If I am going to keep running the race set before me, I need to ensure I have something to give at the beginning of each working week. It is important to pause.

    Photo by Jess Watters on Unsplash