Most of us are way kinder to other people than we are to ourselves.
If your friend made a mistake, you’d probably say, “It’s okay. You’re human. You’ll figure it out.”
But when you mess up? It’s more like, “What’s wrong with me?”
That’s where self-compassion comes in.
What Is Self-Compassion?
Self-compassion is simply treating yourself with the same kindness, patience, and understanding you would offer someone you care about which would go through:
- Self-kindness – Being warm and understanding toward yourself instead of harshly critical.
- Common humanity – Remembering that struggle is part of being human. You’re not alone in this.
- Mindfulness – Acknowledging your feelings without exaggerating or suppressing them.
It’s not self-pity.
It’s not laziness.
It’s not making excuses.
It’s saying: “I’m having a hard moment. Let me respond with care instead of criticism.”
And honestly? That changes everything.
Why We Struggle to Be Gentle With Ourselves?
Many of us grew up believing that being hard on ourselves keeps us motivated. We think self-criticism equals discipline.
But research shows the opposite: harsh self-talk increases stress, anxiety, and burnout. Compassion, on the other hand, builds resilience.
You perform better when you feel safe even with yourself.
How to Go Easy on Yourself Today?
You don’t need a 30-day transformation. You just need small, intentional shifts.
1. Changing the Way We Self-Talk
Pause when you notice harsh self-talk.
For instance, Instead of:
“I’m such an idiot.”
Try:
“I made a mistake. That happens. I can fix it.”
It might feel awkward at first. That’s okay. You’re rewiring a habit.
2. Permitting to Rest
You don’t have to earn rest.
You don’t need to be exhausted to deserve a break.
Like:
Closing the work early by a few minutes.
Step outside for 10 minutes.
Resting is not weakness it’s maintenance.
3. Lowering the Bar (Just for Today)
Not every day needs to be a 10/10 productivity masterpiece.
Maybe today is a “bare minimum” day:
- Respond to the most important email.
- Eat something nourishing.
- Move your body a little.
- Go to bed on time.
That counts.
4. Reducing Comparision for Today
Comparison steals peace.
Remember: Everyone edits their life for public view. You’re comparing your messy middle to someone’s polished moment.
Be where your feet are.
5. Writing a Short Self-Compassion Note
Literally write this:
“I know you’re trying. I know this feels heavy. You don’t have to have it all figured out today.”
Keep it in your phone. Re-read when needed.
6. Talking to Yourself Like You Would a Child
If a child was learning to walk and fell, you wouldn’t yell at them for not being perfect.
You’d say, “It’s okay. Try again.”
You’re allowed the same gentleness while learning, growing, and stumbling.
7. Accepting That “Good Enough” Is Powerful
Perfection is exhausting.
Done is powerful.
Progress is powerful.
Trying is powerful.
You don’t have to be exceptional to be worthy.
8. Feeling The Feelings — Without Judging Them
Instead of:
“I shouldn’t feel this way.”
Try:
“This is what I’m feeling right now.”
Emotions pass faster when we stop fighting them.
What Self-Compassion Is NOT?
Let’s clear this up:
- It’s not letting yourself off the hook forever.
- It’s not avoiding responsibility.
- It’s not giving up.
It’s creating an inner environment where growth feels safe instead of punishing.
And growth thrives in safety.
The Final Statement
You are allowed to:
- Have bad days.
- Change your mind.
- Need help.
- Start over.
- Go slower.
- Not be perfect.
We at Mentoring Minds Counsellors understand that Self-compassion isn’t something you master once. It’s something you practice especially on the days you feel least deserving of it.
So today, ask yourself:
“What would being kind to myself look like right now?”
Then do that.
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