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Archive for September, 2009

Practicing Compassion…on Yourself

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009

I am a compassionate person. I know I am. If my best friend called me right now and told me about the frustrations of her day or her insecurities about herself as a mother or business professional, I’d be the first to tell her I know she’s doing an excellent job — the best she can — and that she is being too hard on herself.

But today was one of those days when having compassion for myself was not so easy. In fact, I have a whole long list of things I should or shouldn’t have done.

  • I shouldn’t have let me daughter watch so much TV.
  • I should have come up with a creative project to do with my daughter.
  • I should have interacted more with the baby.
  • I shouldn’t have laid down for that 20 minute nap.
  • I should have been more focused during the brief amount of time I had for work.
  • I shouldn’t have eaten that pumpkin bread…or those cookies…or the rest of my daughter’s cookie.
  • I should have written a blog entry yesterday, and the day before, and the day before.
  • I shouldn’t have spent that money on the pumpkin bread and cookie we didn’t need.
  • I should have made a better dinner.
  • I should have gotten the house tidied up.

Ok, you get the picture. I’ve been “shoulding” on myself all day long. Not to mention I haven’t been cutting myself any slack. And what I have found is that I am not alone.

I was talking with a high-level executive with a large company the other day who was beating herself up for all that she hasn’t done in her job over the past year since having twins. She returned from maternity leave with the plan to be SUPERMOM. She would continue operating in her fast-paced position as she had before kids, while at the same time being the perfect mom and wife. Not surprisingly, she was completely overwhelmed and feeling terrible about where she was in her career.

Although we identified some concrete steps for her to take to communicate honestly with her boss about how she was feeling, regain her focus in her current job, potentially begin looking for a new job that was more family-friendly and she enjoyed more, the first thing I asked her to do was have some compassion for herself. She had survived the first year of life with twins and was feeling good about her role as a mother and still had a strong marriage to speak of. She’s obviously been doing some things right and, I am convinced, doing the best she could.

When I asked her what she would tell her best friend if she had been in the same situation, she knew immediately that she would tell her she’s been doing a great job and that perhaps she has too high of expectations for herself.

So why is it that we can so easily and effortlessly provide compassion for those around us, but not for ourselves?

I work with women who are high-achieving, successful, productive, competent, professional and driven. Up until the point they have kids, these qualities have gotten them where they are in their career. Once they have kids, these qualities don’t just go away. In fact, for many, they intensify. The expectations and standards we put on ourselves in both our professional lives and our personal lives are at a level so high that we either feel like we are failing if we aren’t meeting them or we are overwhelmed and exhausted if we are (or at least trying to).

Tonight I am practicing compassion…on myself. My husband can tell me until he’s blue in the fact how great of job he thinks I am doing (which I appreciate) and I know that if I called my best friend right now and told her about my day she would also have compassion. But most importantly is that I cut myself some slack. I know that if I did (or didn’t do) all those things I listed above day after day that I would not be where I want to be in life. But I also know that it’s okay to have a day when the TV is on more and you aren’t as interested in playing with the kids and the dinner is just a simple meal on the table and you don’t get done more for work and you eat some sweets and the house doesn’t look so clean.

Tomorrow is a new day and I am doing the best I can. Now it’s time to cut myself some slack with a glass of wine!

Tips for practicing compassion in your own life:

  1. Consider whether you are trying to be SUPERMOM and what exactly that looks like to you. Is it time to redefine success in your life and create an image of SUPERMOM that is much more manageable (and fun)?
  2. When you find yourself beating yourself up for something you did or didn’t do, ask yourself, “Is there anything I can do about it now?” If not, move on. If so, make a plan to do it different from that point on.
  3. Determine whether the thing (or things) you are beating yourself up for are every-once-in-awhile things or actual bad habits that you want to change. If they are habits you want to change, make a plan and ask for help in sticking to it.
  4. Play the “what would I say to my best friend” game. If you find you would be understanding and compassionate to your best friend if they were in the same situation then you know you are being too hard on yourself.
  5. Consider what you are modeling for your kids. If you don’t cut yourself any slack then don’t be surprised if you notice your own children being extra hard on themselves.

I’d love to hear your thoughts about being compassionate with yourself. Do you find it easy or challenging? Any additional tips on how to practice more self compassion?

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Pause, Please

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

There seems to be a reoccurring theme amongst the working moms I’ve been talking with these days. Seems as if a number of us are feeling the intense pressure of trying to do it all, and do it all with very high expectations of ourselves.

I’ll admit it. I found myself wishing for a pause button earlier this week as I was in tears saying to my husband that I just can’t do it all. Yep. Even I, the coach who helps moms in business decrease their stress so they can feel more successful at work and home, is admitting that I have moments when I feel overwhelmed and under-appreciated.

Here are three steps to help turn those moments of complete anxiety into opportunities for a reprieve.

1) Allow the feelings, without judgement. You feel the way you feel. There may or may not be rationale reasons. Although there may be. Yes, you may be PMSing or exhausted from being up with the baby at night, but that doesn’t mean that how you feel isn’t legitimate and warranted. Yes, women do it all the time — many making it all look seamless and easy, but I can guarantee that they too have times when they feel like it’s all just too much. It’s how you feel. That’s enough. And allowing the feeling of anxiety and overwhelm to move through (and out) of your body will actually feel better in the end. Trying hard to keep it “under control” or judging that it’s bad only makes it worse.

2) Accept and honor your role as the mother. Let’s be honest. There is a reason why women are the moms. We think differently, feel differently, respond differently, and we all have a very wise mother within (some are able to access theirs a bit easier then others) who knows on a very intuitive level what our kids need. This is an honorable role. This role also comes with tremendous responsibility (and often-times feeling of burden). Your husband can not fill or match that role. Neither can your child care provider, child’s teacher or your mother-in-law. I find that when I can honor and truly accept the role of THE MOM instead of wishing it were different or feeling resentful that my husband just doesn’t understand, I feel much more empowered and positive.

3) Get clear about what you need and then ASK for it. If you are lucky enough to have a husband such as I do who will actually ask you what you need to get through the tough times — the times when you just want to push the pause button, please, on motherhood – you better be ready to answer. If you aren’t directly asked, you can still get what you need by knowing and asking those around you for help. Whether it’s a day at home with no one else in the house, thirty minutes to walk in the sun, additional child care support during the week, a weekend without worrying about meals (I could go on and on with ideas…), you have to be willing to ask (and receive) for the time to take a pause from being *on* all the time.

It’s okay to want a break sometimes from “doing it all”. We can have it all without having to DO it all ourselves. It’s important that we put down the SUPERMOM cape every-so-often and crumble under the pressure (or better yet, take the breaks before we crumble). We are only human and sometimes trying to manage it all — even with the  best husband, the sweetest kids, the perfect job — can just feel like too much.

Hitting the pause button now…

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