"Self-care is how you take your power back." - Lalah Delia
Warmer and longer summer days, time outside, family gatherings, and time on patios mean there is more that we can do to manage our stress. At the same time, always having somewhere to be and something to do can be draining, even if that thing to do is taking a time out at the beach – I see you, mother of four who must pack the sunscreen, the bug spray, the binky, the stroller, the beach toys, the foodstuff, and everything else. Even vacation time can leave us feeling more exhausted than before we left home.
But here’s the thing. It’s the mindset that matters. By mindset, I mean the established set of attitudes that we adopt toward our self-care. That’s one of the things I think about when I read this quote from Lalah Delia. Self-care is simply a practice of taking an active role in protecting your health and well-being. It’s a way to improve one’s health. It is an essential self-help activity during times of high stress. As the quote implies, self-care is a way to regain your power. I see that as an opportunity to look into and understand our untold stories about managing stress.
The Rubber Band Analogy
I like to use the rubber band analogy when describing human stress experiences.
Imagine a rubber band. It is designed to be stretchy; that’s the nature of it and how it is meant to work. Now imagine stretching that rubber band. The rubber band still does its job when stretched to a certain point. Keep stretching the same band to a reasonable limit for an extended period, and the band will remain intact, but it loses a little of its ability to bounce back. With continuous stretching, the band never returns to its original shape or size; it adapts to its condition of being stretched out. But the band will break if you stretch it beyond the reasonable limits of its remaining elasticity.
This is the same way stress works in the human body. Without launching into an anatomical description, it suffices to say that our bodies are built for stress, but only a certain amount of it and for a limited duration. When we experience prolonged periods of chronic stress, fatigue sets in. That can feel like decreased energy levels, insomnia, decreased libido, depression, digestive issues, and even frequent pain. In the end, we are left with a constant feeling of fatigue. We are too tired. Too tired to feel motivated. Too tired to remember things. Too tired to concentrate or focus on tasks. Even too tired to feel like we have the power to change our situation.
Self-Care as a Power Story
When I think about the quote, “self-care is how you take your power back,” I see an opportunity to reframe the power of self-care as more than the physical, ‘charge-your-batteries' kind of power. Yes, charging the batteries is good, but real power, the ability to get people to do what they would not otherwise want to do, is where the gem of sustainable self-care lies.
The charge-your-batteries notion of powering is a short-term solution to managing fatigue. With it, you are working with the mindset of doing enough self-care to safely (and sanely) get another thing checked off your to-do list. Once that box is checked, you may stop to recharge your batteries once again. There’s a certain rhythm to this process. It is a cycle of doing just enough for your self-care to keep moving from one task to another.
But taking your power back, by that, I mean directing your influence towards yourself and your actions, has a more durable self-care outcome. Imagine the rubber band once again. Picture that as your own body. Your agency and sovereignty allow you to determine under what conditions your rubber band will be stretched. I believe saying ‘no’ to some stress-inducing experiences epitomizes taking your power back.
Treating Fatigue and Stress with Self-care
Wait! Before your eyes roll and the 'this writer is in la-la land’ inner monologue sets in, consider this: saying ‘no’ comes from an understanding that there is a difference between working hard and overworking at the expense of your physical, mental, and emotional health. Yes, you heard me right, father of two who is ruminating over scheduling conflicts for the coming week as you turn your family’s Sunday into a pre-Monday stress-fest.
Even if the stressor is workplace-related, you could do well to take some of your power back to prioritize your self-care. And to the father of two, the mother of four, and anyone else with or without children, jobs to attend, or households to run, that prioritization can look different. Nevertheless, what we all have in common is the capacity to treat our self-care as an exercise of our power. When we do this, we take meaningful steps that will serve us better in the long run.
This article points to some of those self-sovereignty steps. For instance, one power-enhancing component is tracking what stresses you out and your responses to those stressors. By journaling about your experiences and answers, you can learn about your behaviour patterns and triggers. As you know more about yourself and how you act under certain conditions, you understand better when to say ‘no’ and when it makes sense to say ‘yes.’
Establishing boundaries is another way to exercise sovereignty over your self-care. Setting rules for your time on social media, checking emails, or answering the telephone is powerful if you see it as putting your self-care needs first instead of feeling like missing out or falling behind.
And, of course, learning how to relax and asking for help are other ways to take your power back. Here, the power lies in recognizing that self-care and feeling less stressed have little to do with feeling happy all the time. Good mental health comes from appropriate emotional and behavioural responses to stressors.
Our lives have become so determined by things to do that we have succeeded in treating taking time for our relaxation as a luxury. We have also been programmed to think that asking for help is a presentation of our weaknesses instead of what it is – a signal of our courage and wisdom. Returning to the story of our power can orient us to a growth mindset that makes relaxing (just because our bodies need it as much as they need air and food) and asking for help when we need it a regular part of our self-care routine.
The Bottom Line
There are many things we can do to begin rescuing our bodies from the chronic fatigue of living with stress. There is no magic antidote to stress, and it will never disappear. All we can do is change our relationship with our stressors by attending to our mindsets. There is no quick fix for this. The truth of it is that it all takes practice. The attitudinal shift that will allow us to listen to and learn from our untold stories about stress and fatigue is also a cultivated practice.
But imagine if we could take the time to tune in to our stressors and responses and use that as the starting point for creating a story about our situational power; imagine the heroic journey that lies beyond that. This, my friend, is the power of attending to our untold stories. There is a powerful story about our self-care waiting to be lived and told somewhere in each of us.
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