More threads by David Baxter PhD

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
Go Easy on Yourself, a New Wave of Research Urges
By TARA PARKER-POPE, New York Times
February 28, 2011

Do you treat yourself as well as you treat your friends and family?

That simple question is the basis for a burgeoning new area of psychological research called self-compassion — how kindly people view themselves. People who find it easy to be supportive and understanding to others, it turns out, often score surprisingly low on self-compassion tests, berating themselves for perceived failures like being overweight or not exercising.

The research suggests that giving ourselves a break and accepting our imperfections may be the first step toward better health. People who score high on tests of self-compassion have less depression and anxiety, and tend to be happier and more optimistic. Preliminary data suggest that self-compassion can even influence how much we eat and may help some people lose weight.

This idea does seem at odds with the advice dispensed by many doctors and self-help books, which suggest that willpower and self-discipline are the keys to better health. But Kristin Neff, a pioneer in the field, says self-compassion is not to be confused with self-indulgence or lower standards.

“I found in my research :acrobat: that the biggest reason people aren’t more self-compassionate is that they are afraid they’ll become self-indulgent,” said Dr. Neff, an associate professor of human development at the University of Texas at Austin. “They believe self-criticism is what keeps them in line. Most people have gotten it wrong because our culture says being hard on yourself is the way to be.”

Imagine your reaction to a child struggling in school or eating too much junk food. Many parents would offer support, like tutoring or making an effort to find healthful foods the child will enjoy. But when adults find themselves in a similar situation — struggling at work, or overeating and gaining weight — many fall into a cycle of self-criticism and negativity. That leaves them feeling even less motivated to change.

“Self-compassion is really conducive to motivation,” Dr. Neff said. “The reason you don’t let your children eat five big tubs of ice cream is because you care about them. With self-compassion, if you care about yourself, you do what’s healthy for you rather than what’s harmful to you.”

Dr. Neff, whose book, Self-Compassion: Stop Beating Yourself Up and Leave Insecurity Behind, is being published next month by William Morrow, has developed a self-compassion scale: 26 statements meant to determine how often people are kind to themselves, and whether they recognize that ups and downs are simply part of life.

A positive response to the statement “I’m disapproving and judgmental about my own flaws and inadequacies,” for example, suggests lack of self-compassion. “When I feel inadequate in some way, I try to remind myself that feelings of inadequacy are shared by most people” suggests the opposite.

For those low on the scale, Dr. Neff suggests a set of exercises — like writing yourself a letter of support, just as you might to a friend you are concerned about. Listing your best and worst traits, reminding yourself that nobody is perfect and thinking of steps you might take to help you feel better about yourself are also recommended.

Other exercises include meditation and “compassion breaks,” which involve repeating mantras like “I’m going to be kind to myself in this moment.”

If this all sounds a bit too warm and fuzzy, like the Al Franken character Stuart Smalley (“I’m good enough, I’m smart enough, and doggone it, people like me”), there is science to back it up. A 2007 study by researchers at Wake Forest University suggested that even a minor self-compassion intervention could influence eating habits. As part of the study, 84 female college students were asked to take part in what they thought was a food-tasting experiment. At the beginning of the study, the women were asked to eat doughnuts.

One group, however, was given a lesson in self-compassion with the food. “I hope you won’t be hard on yourself,” the instructor said. “Everyone in the study eats this stuff, so I don’t think there’s any reason to feel real bad about it.”

Later the women were asked to taste-test candies from large bowls. The researchers found that women who were regular dieters or had guilt feelings about forbidden foods ate less after hearing the instructor’s reassurance. Those not given that message ate more.

The hypothesis is that the women who felt bad about the doughnuts ended up engaging in “emotional” eating. The women who gave themselves permission to enjoy the sweets didn’t overeat.

“Self-compassion is the missing ingredient in every diet and weight-loss plan,” said Jean Fain, a psychotherapist and teaching associate at Harvard Medical School who wrote the new book The Self-Compassion Diet (Sounds True publishing). “Most plans revolve around self-discipline, deprivation and neglect.”

Dr. Neff says that the field is still new and that she is just starting a controlled study to determine whether teaching self-compassion actually leads to lower stress, depression and anxiety and more happiness and life satisfaction.

“The problem is that it’s hard to unlearn habits of a lifetime,” she said. “People have to actively and consciously develop the habit of self-compassion.”
 

Attachments

  • JRPbrief.pdf
    182 bytes · Views: 0

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
The Power of Self-Compassion

The Power of Self-Compassion
By Kelly McGonigal, Ph.D., Psychology Today
March 2, 2011

The number one most emailed article on the New York Times, at the time I'm writing this, is a blog post by Tara Parker-Pope on the importance of self-compassion for making a change such as losing weight or quitting smoking.

It is striking that the article is the most emailed -- clearly it strikes a chord among the typical self-critical, stressed out reader -- but also is followed by an avalance of negative comments, saying things like: "Oh good grief! Americans think so highly of themselves as it is. Really there shouldn?t be more encouragement, " and " if we don?t hold ourselves to high performance standards, how can we, ethically and morally, expect others to meet those standards?" These comments reflect a fundamental misunderstanding of what self-compassion is, how it contributes to (not undermines) self-accountability, and how it differs from self-esteem.

I recently gave a 15-minute talk at the Stanford Happiness Conference about the importance of self-compassion and the research on how it helps us maintain -- not abandon -- our standards and succeed at our goals, as well as increase happiness and decrease depression.

 

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
Can Self-Compassion Help the Self-Loathing Person?

Can Self-Compassion Help the Self-Loathing Person?
by Mark D. White, Ph.D., Psychology Today
March 5, 2011

Can a self-loathing person be kind to himself?

Like Professor McGonigal in The Power of Self-Compassion, I too read Tara Parker-Pope's New York Times article on self-compassion with interest, and immediately wondered how Professor Kristin Neff's work in the area might relate to my previous posts about self-loathing and feelings of inadequacy (see here, here, here, and here). Might self-compassion provide help to the self-loathing? I'm afraid I'm skeptical, and here's why.

As I've explained before, the self-loathing person does not respond to external praise well, either minimizing it, explaining it away, or dismissing it altogether. However much friends and family tell him he is a good person, he shrugs it off, saying that these people obviously don't know the real person inside. The only way a self-loathing person is going to overcome his self-loathing is internally, changing his beliefs about himself. And this is where self-compassion seems promising, especially if self-compassion can help the self-loathing person see himself differently.

In her 2003 article, "Self-Compassion: An Alternative Conceptualization of a Healthy Attitude Toward Oneself (Self and Identity 2: 85-101), Professor Neff describes three aspects of self-compassion:
(a) self-kindness?extending kindness and understanding to oneself rather than harsh judgment and self-criticism, (b) common humanity?seeing one's experiences as part of the larger human experience rather than seeing them as separating and isolating, and (c) mindfulness?holding one's painful thoughts and feelings in balanced awareness rather than over-identifying with them. (p. 89)
On the surface, these seem tailor-made for the self-loathing person, since each one would help him "go easy on himself," as Ms. Parker-Pope says in the title of her New York Times piece.

However, it would be very difficult for a self-loathing individual to initiate self-compassion, for the simple reason that they would likely do not feel they deserve to. Imagine telling a depressed person to cheer up, to which she would probably reply, "if I could just 'cheer up,' I wouldn't be depressed!" But the case of the self-loathing person is somewhat different (although, of course, he may also be depressed): it may not be that he can not feel compassion for himself, but rather that he doesn't feel he deserves it.

One reason the self-loathing person is dismissive of praise from other people is that, despite their protestations, he does not feel he merits the praise. He feels worthless, and any worth that other people attribute to him, to his mind, must surely be a mistake. How is such a person to feel he is worth his own compassion, especially when he knows better than anybody else his "true" worthlessness?

As Lao-Tzu famously said (roughly), a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.

The self-loathing individual may very well be able to take that first step, but first he must believe the journey is worth taking. And if that belief depends on self-compassion, we have a vicious circle, and there doesn't seem to be an obvious way to break it.
 
Replying is not possible. This forum is only available as an archive.
Top