Handle with Care

If I were an item of clothing with my own ‘care instructions’ tag, it would probably read something like this:

“regularly moisturize with kind words, feed daily doses of chocolate, exert gentle, routine exercise, and maintain healthy diet for happy demeanor.”

Yes, I’m aware of what I need. But do I do it?

The truth is, though I’d never encourage someone to skip their own self-care needs, I have a nagging voice that says it’s okay to cut corners and put myself in the proverbial drier (because it’s more efficient than the hang-dry I really need.)

I get up early to make my husband his breakfast smoothie, but often I leave myself no time to cook a healthy dinner when I eat it alone.

I urge my friends to plan time to paint or sing to nurture their souls, and yet these items on my list often get shoved to the bottom for “if I have time for it.”

When I hand-wash my sweaters, I’m protecting them from falling apart. The sweaters aren’t “spoiled” by this.

Self-care is mandatory if you don’t want to break down.

(How many times will I tell myself this before it really sinks in?) I’ve had enough break downs to speak as an authority.

Take notes on the things that strengthen and heal you. Plan a self-care routine that doesn’t consume your life. Weekly trips to the day spa probably isn’t sustainable, but a fifteen-minute soak in the tub, might be.

I think it’s time that many of us started reading and applying our ‘care instructions’ tags.

What self-care is your life is missing?

Elise

To get future blog posts sent directly to your email inbox, click here

This Post Has 4 Comments

    1. Thanks, Galit! Now the tricky part if holding ourselves and each other accountable to actually taking care of ourselves (putting on our own oxygen mask before helping others on the airplane is a good analogy!)

  1. Lovely post, and so true. I especially need to heed the “eat nourishing food” part. Way too easy to eat quick, unhealthy options that DO have an impact on mood.

    1. Thank you, Melissa! Isn’t it easy to justify “efficient” over “healthy”? I want to encourage my friends to get less done in a day, if that’s what it takes to walk with kindness and care for ourselves. Our own well-being isn’t worth the sacrifice.

Leave a Reply to Elise Cancel reply

Close Menu