
"Self-love is an important practice in healing and is often associated with self-compassion, self-esteem, and self-care. These practices, while important, can feel frustratingly out of reach for those who have survived toxic relationships or highly critical and high-conflict family environments, which can feel traumatic."
"many adults raised by narcissistic, emotionally immature, or high-conflict caregivers find the idea of "loving yourself" can feel abstract or emotionally unsafe. When affection and approval were conditional, self-worth often became tied to performance, compliance, or emotional caretaking. As a result, many trauma survivors enter adulthood struggling with chronic self-criticism, people-pleasing, and difficulty trusting their own needs."
"I have found in working with survivors that acts of self- respect (such as setting boundaries, assertiveness, and treating themselves like they would a loved one) can be the first step in beginning their practice of self-love, which leads to ongoing healing."
"While self-love is commonly understood as an internal feeling, self-respect is expressed through behavior. It shows up in the choices you make, the boundaries you set, and the standards you accept of others for how you are treated. Self-respect is a practice, and this practice requires both discipline and the ability to to"
Self-love supports healing and is often linked with self-compassion, self-esteem, and self-care, but these can feel unreachable after toxic relationships or highly critical, high-conflict family environments. Many adults raised by narcissistic, emotionally immature, or high-conflict caregivers experience self-love as emotionally unsafe because affection and approval were conditional. Self-worth becomes tied to performance, compliance, or emotional caretaking, leading to chronic self-criticism, people-pleasing, and difficulty trusting personal needs. Inner bullies drive shame and guilt and erode self-worth. Acts of self-respect, including setting boundaries and assertiveness and treating oneself like a loved one, can begin self-love and ongoing healing. Self-respect is behavioral rather than purely emotional, shown through choices, boundaries, and standards for how others treat you, requiring discipline and persistence even when uncomfortable.
Read at Psychology Today
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