Self-Acceptance is anti-depression. If you cannot accept yourself for who
you are, you cannot love yourself, and not loving yourself is always the
beginning of depression.
In a general sense, self-esteem is
the positive or negative evaluative perception of self. It is a rating of
self based on a partial assessment of current and/or past traits. Many
mental health professionals claim that achieving higher self-esteem is the
keystone of good mental health, in particular, in avoiding depression; such
claims, however, are dubious at best.
Low self-esteem is self-doubt,
often expressed in not asserting oneself in public or workplace, and not
pushing past one’s comfort zones.
To love
yourself is self-acceptance, which is
accepting who and what you really are—and not who and what you wish you were
(that is, your ego-self). It should also be pointed out that “loving yourself” and “loving
your ego-self” are not quite the same. The former is loving yourself for who
you really are, despite all your imperfections; the latter involves loving or
craving to be the person you wish you were. “Loving yourself” means you can
love others as well because they are not very different from you in that they,
too, are as imperfect as you are. On the other hand, “loving your ego-self”
means it is very difficult to love others because you want to distinguish
and separate yourself from others; accordingly, others must somehow satisfy
your ego first before you can love them. That explains why if you
have a big ego-self, you cannot easily and readily love others.
The
bottom line: if you can accept yourself as who and what you are, then it may
become much easier for you to accept and love others as who and what they are. The
absence of love is a mindset for depression.
Stephen Lau
Copyright© by Stephen Lau
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