From Self-Awareness to Self-Empathy: A Journey Within
Table of Content:
🌱 From Self-Awareness to Self-Empathy: A Journey Within
Hello and welcome back!
If you're someone who's committed to building better self-awareness, here's a question for you:
Can we truly grow if we ignore the negative patterns within us?
✍️ Step 1: Recognize the Pattern
Grab a sheet of paper and take a few moments to retrospect.
Write down your recurring negative patterns—habits or reactions that you know aren't helping you. Be honest. For example:
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I get angry easily
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I procrastinate often
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I compare myself too much
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I speak harshly under stress
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I overthink decisions
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I feel demotivated and stuck
Recognizing your repeated behaviors is a major milestone. That’s right—the job is halfway done when you acknowledge them.
But now comes the most important question:
How do I deal with these patterns?
Should we wait for others to point them out? Or should we begin the transformation ourselves?
❤️ Step 2: A Thought Experiment on Empathy
Let’s imagine something powerful.
It’s the end of a long day. You walk into another room and find the person you love the most crying—tears streaming, overwhelmed.
What would you do?
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Ignore them?
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Or go to them, hug them, and say:
“I’m here. Talk to me. Please don’t cry. I’m with you.”
Of course, you’d choose the second option.
But now the real question:
Would you do the same for yourself?
You just wrote down those “bad qualities.” Maybe things like:
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“I’m a failure.”
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“I’m angry.”
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“I’m anxious.”
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“I have no focus.”
Are you just going to beat yourself up over them? Or are you going to meet yourself with compassion?
🌿 Step 3: Practicing Self-Empathy
Enter the powerful concept of Self-Empathy.
In Buddhism, there's a story about two arrows:
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The first arrow represents life’s inevitable pain—loss, failure, criticism, struggle. It hits us and hurts. We cannot avoid it.
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But we shoot the second arrow ourselves—by blaming, shaming, and judging ourselves for being hit in the first place.
Self-empathy helps us drop the second arrow.
It teaches us not to spiral in guilt, but to meet our pain with gentleness.
🧘♀️ A Tool to Try: The “Of Course” Response
Next time you're feeling low, anxious, or triggered, try this simple phrase:
“Of course.”
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Of course, I’m feeling overwhelmed.
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Of course, I’m tired and struggling to focus.
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Of course, I’m feeling disconnected.
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Of course, I got upset again.
This small phrase isn't resignation—it’s recognition.
It’s you, honoring your humanity instead of resisting it.
It creates a moment of stillness where healing can begin. And in that stillness, you begin to build a new, gentler relationship with yourself.
💬 Final Words: Be the One Who Heals You
You were able to feel empathy for your loved one, remember?
Now it’s time to offer that same love to yourself.
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Recognize your habits.
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Respond with self-empathy.
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Replace blame with understanding.
Each time you practice this, you take one step closer to becoming your calm, strong, and whole self.
So go ahead. Give yourself a hug in your heart today. You deserve it.
Thank you for reading.
We'll continue exploring this beautiful journey of self-awareness in our next post. Stay kind to yourself and stay tuned. 🌼