Holding Yourself in High Esteem

#ILiveStonewear, Ambassador, Deanna Lynn Wulff, Self-Esteem -

path to self-esteem

I wasted 20 years of my life concentrating on something so stupid, it is embarrassing to admit.

Between the ages of 14 and 34, I wanted to lose five pounds.

I tried every single diet on the earth, from Scarsdale to Atkins and back. I believed if only I were skinnier and prettier, everything would be perfect.

But I had three major experiences that knocked that belief right out of my mind and my life… although admittedly, it took a long while.

When I was 18, I went to college, and while away from my parents, I was finally able to control my eating enough that I lost those five pounds. And what happened? Did I suddenly feel terrific and grand? Did the universe open up and Buddha come for a personal visit?

No.

Just the opposite. I felt miserable and empty, like a blank sheet of paper with nothing on it. It turned out that being pretty and skinny was not good enough. I don’t believe it’s good enough for anyone. So I got busy working on a career instead.

But I still struggled with that five pounds–on and off. So it went.

About five years later, I spent my first summer working in Yosemite. After hiking for a month in a natural environment, I felt beautiful for the first time in my life. I had no mirrors, I had no eyes upon me, and I had very little money. But I had my own special connection with the world. It was a revelation. I wondered why no one had mentioned the wonder tonic of the wilderness to me before.

But I could not stay in the mountains forever. In the fall, I would come down from the Sierra Nevada and begin fighting with that five pounds yet again.

What finally ended my obsession was no diet. It wasn’t a good friend, a loving boyfriend, or a series of tips that I read in a magazine. I began to examine my life and question what I could offer to others. How could I be of service? I didn’t want to collect a bunch of crap and buy a house and call myself a success. I understood that was an empty dream and a lonely path. It was not good enough for me, and I don’t believe it’s good enough for anyone.

I immediately began working towards offering something of real value to others. Perhaps I could teach writing, or maybe I could return to journalism. I renewed my studies, went back to school, and restarted my life. And then I lost five poundsβ€”without trying. I haven’t seen them since. And I don’t care.

The primary meaning of esteem is to have value. To truly have high self-esteem, ironically, we have to spend a lot less time thinking about ourselves, and much more time developing our passions and our skills and sharing them with others.

Life’s most persistent and urgent question is, β€œWhat are you doing for others?”—Martin Luther King, Jr.

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Read more from Deanna Lynn Wulff, Stonewear Grassroots Team member, on her blog Minerva’s Moxie

The post Holding Yourself in High Esteem appeared first on Live Stonewear.


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