Introduction
This is a very strange assertion: to say that
self-compassion is an inner mechanism of compensation for when we fail. The aim
of this post is to make this statement a lot more understandable and ultimately
real to you.
Compassion of a very ordinary mechanical type is brought
forth in people when we see that others are suffering, undergoing a difficult
time or have failed in something or rather, and or are worse off than
ourselves. So self-compassion is ourselves giving that to ourselves, but in the
wrong way, where we just end up getting stuck, not getting up (and trying
again) and feeling worse and worse about ourselves, others, our situation and
the world.
An Inner Mechanism of Compensation?
Self-compassion is really a compensation for when we fail in
life, or in any endeavour that we undertake, whether it be something in our
human life or something in our spiritual life.
When we fail we need something to console us and to commiserate
our failure, and we have just that element inside of ourselves, and that
element is what we call self-compassion. It is a psychological characteristic
or ‘I’ (ego, one of the many that we have) that feels sorry for ourselves and
says things like, I’m a failure, I’m doing nothing in life, I’m going nowhere,
I’m not going to make it. We feel that we can’t achieve, that we can’t get to
where we want to go.
Self-compassion seeks
others that are sympathetic to its failure and join us in our lamentations about
having failed. It doesn’t like people who say: “get up and try again” and or
“stop feeling sorry for yourself and just do it”. This is because it wants to
compensate for its failure by giving itself compassion, recovery time, rest,
feel good movies, feel good comfort food, lamentations, regrets, going over and
over the reasons why we failed, blaming others etc. etc.
A Debt with Ourselves
When we don’t do all that we can, in other words when we
don’t give our best we create a debt with ourselves. Or when we have an
expectation of ourself, we create a debt with ourselves when we fail. And to
compensate for that debt or to pay that debt we have the psychological element
called self-compassion that trues to cancel that debt by giving ourselves
compassion of a negative type, justifying the failure saying that wea re
useless and good for nothing.
The Right Kind of Self-Compassion
If we were to say to people don’t have compassion with
yourself, a lot of people would protest. We actually want to say don’t have the
negative type of self-compassion with yourself. Definitely don’t indulge in
that and go ahead and eliminate it, already.
You can have the positive self-compassion which recognises
that we failed and impulses us to get up immediately and learn about where we
failed, and try again correcting our path that lead to our failure. Get up,
repent, repair and go again until you triumph, that is the real self-compassion
because that is what brings you hope, makes you authentically feel better and
leads you to triumph which is entirely in your benefit. The other negative type
of self-compassion leads you in a hole that you dig deeper and deeper every
minute that you don’t get out of it.
Conclusion
So I really hope that we have made this topic of
self-compassion a lot clearer and that you may find it useful for when you feel
self-compassion to be able to understand that when we feel this way, we are
only trying to balance our failure and we don’t need self-compassion to do that
for us we can do it by trying again, getting up and going again!
End.
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