1. Feel your feelings rather than avoiding them.
One of the best ways to honor yourself is to go easy on yourself when you’re feeling down. When you’re happy you share it with others, so why not do the same when you’re sad? When you are honest about your feelings you will be less likely to use things like food, alcohol or shopping to avoid feeling them. An added bonus is that you will be showing others that it’s okay to be honest as well.
2. Practice forgiveness.
Do you have a hard time forgiving people that have wronged you? You’re not alone. Why should you forgive someone when they are the ones that hurt you. Doesn’t seem fair at all! The thing is, forgiveness brings you freedom. It doesn’t mean you condone or accept their behavior, it simply means that you are ready to feel better. Forgiveness is giving up the hope of a better or different yesterday, so that you acknowledge what someone did or didn’t do that was hurtful and that you are not going to allow it to hurt you anymore. It gives you freedom.
3. Don’t wait for time to heal.
You’ve probably heard that, “Time heals all wounds”. But is that really true? Who do you know that is still heartbroken over something that happened 5, 10 or even 20 years ago? If grief really “just takes time” wouldn’t 20 years be enough time? The sad truth is the idea that time heals all wounds keeps grievers stuck in their heartache, because it’s not true. Time only passes. It’s what you do within that time that heals. So this year consider taking the actions that could lead to your freedom like signing up for The Grief Recovery Method 7-Week Program. There is no time like the present to truly practice self-care by getting complete with the relationships and events in your past that limit your capacity for happiness.
"Two roads diverged in a wood and I – I took the one less traveled by."
- Robert Frost
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