Quote:
Originally Posted by hamster-bamster
So my ex urges me to get rid of my attachment to him as a pathological one (I've destroyed his life and now got attached) and instead live for a while without attachments, developing an attachment to self as a step that one just cannot skip on the road to healthy relationships.
So I take it, he is talking about self-love.
I am at my wit's end.
I was not brought up to love myself. My parents always were the first. Let me mention just a couple examples - I do not want to bore you.
At one point, I left a bf for another guy (who would eventually become my first short-lived husband) in a very cruel, in your face way. The bf attempted suicide by OD which landed him in a hospital (I still do not know whether he had bp or schizophrenia but who cares; ultimately several years later he did die of suicide but it was not in connection with me). Maybe a couple of weeks later I did visit him when he was already home. And we were sort of getting there - I clearly remember sitting in his bed in my bra, already without a top (I even remember the bra, it was a nude bra without lace). But... my grandmother called and said that my mother hit depression. I quickly put on my clothes and left. It never occurred to me that my private life should take precedence. It never occurred to me to say "Well, that is too bad, I think you should call her psychiatrist now. I am not a psychiatrist". No, no such thought ever crossed my mind - depressed mother was a command I could not not obey. Period.
From an early age, my mother put me through a torture of forcing me to listen to her regrets, when she was depressed. She even regretted having married my dad - and shared it with me, the product of their union! And it wasn't as if she shared once impulsively - no, it went on and on and on, in sick cycles.
My dad is narcissistic. That says it all. I won't go into examples.
After such upbringing, how am I supposed to love myself???
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Self-love is the love of oneself.
In 1956 psychologist and social philosopher
Erich Fromm proposed that loving oneself is different from being
arrogant,
conceited or
egocentric. He proposed that loving oneself means
caring about oneself,
taking responsibility for oneself,
respecting oneself, and
knowing oneself (e.g.
being realistic and honest about one's strengths and weaknesses). He proposed, further, that in order to be able to truly love another person, a person needs first to love oneself in this way
Hammie, let's analyze this (first off we know you are not arrogant, conceited or egocentric, not at all). i see you doing these things already, but let's break it down:
- caring about oneself - i see you doing this all the time, feeding yourself, eating healthy meals, to have a healthy body. being careful about choosing lovers into your life - that is good boundaries. daily walks and exercize.
- responsiblity for oneself - yes you very much do this that I see, living by yourself, taking care of your hygeine, working on improving ALL the time.
- respecting oneself - i consider you to highly respect yourself, you stick up for what you believe in, you believe in yourself and have educated yourself, had great jobs, seeking better jobs. You have high values, and aren't afraid to voice them, and have many admirers because of such.
- knowing oneself - you seem to know yourself, very detailed above in your post, but you often leave out your awesome qualities.
- being realistic and honest about one's strengths and weaknesses - you are analyzing and perfectionist to a fault about this subject. you are always open and honest about what you feel are your weaknesses, but some of these, as we have said, seem like hubby projected onto you. maybe to control you, maybe you were more comfortable with being controlled because the parents were immature and put their needs first before those of their beautiful duaghter. I think you know your strengths, you are intelligent, well-spoken, honest, kind, sensitive... to name a few. And your weaknesses.. well this just says to be realistic and honest about them, not to change them right now.
Please add to the list if you feel...
So, how are you supposed to love yourself?
Because you might already, more than you realize. If not, you work on it. It is simply broken down into these 5 categories. Most of these you have mastered more than you realize! You've been through so much painful circumstances, and you learn from them, they make you stronger for having experienced such. You / we are all able to have more wisdom, compassion, kindness, open minds for the suffering we've lived. And just because our parents may have raised us in a harmful way, we have more information to go on, what works, what doesn't work. You have every potential to be a better parent than they were. I have no doubt you are mastering this self-love concept.
Will he think of some next task for you to complete after this one? No offense, I know you care deeply for the man. And where does he stack up on the mastery of self love?