Being genuine with ourselves and with others

The very basis of  fear itself is doubting ourselves, not trusting ourselves. You could also say it is not loving ourselves, not respecting ourselves. In a nutshell, you feel bad about who you are. So the very first step, and perhaps the hardest, is developing an unconditional friendship with oneself. Developing unconditional friendship means taking the very scary step of getting to know yourself. It means being willing to look at yourself clearly and to stay with yourself when you want to shut down. It means keeping your heart open when you feel that what you see in yourself is just too embarrassing, too painful, too unpleasant, too hateful.

If you do stay present with what you see when you look at yourself again and again, you begin to develop a deeper friendship with yourself. It’s a complete friendship, because you are not leaving out the parts that are painful to be with. It’s the same way you would develop a complete friendship with another person. You include all that they are. When you develop this complete friendship with yourself, the parts you’re embarrassed about—as well as the parts you’re proud of—manifest as genuineness. A genuine person is a person who is not hiding anything, who is not conning themselves. A genuine person doesn’t put up masks and shields.

Pema Chodron

2 thoughts on “Being genuine with ourselves and with others

  1. Another good post. I’ve been told that to love others rightly we must first love ourselves. I believe this to be true. We should recieve ourselves and accept ourselves no matter what. Sure we’ve made mistakes, sure we’ve embarrassed ourselves. Unforgivness in ourselves will only carry over into our private and public lives. Carry on!!!

  2. “The very basis of fear itself is doubting ourselves, not trusting ourselves.”

    I agree with this. It seems like a lot of fear boils down to “I don’t know if I can handle X.” X being whatever worst-case situation the mind is projecting for the situation being feared.

    Recognizing that X exists only as a creation of the mind and then confirming to myself that, regardless the outcome, “I can handle it” has helped push me through many times I’ve felt scared to do something.

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