July 7, 2025
âBe kind to yourselfâ sounds like something youâd see on a bumper sticker or a Pinterest quote, right? Easy to say, harder to do, especially when your inbox is overflowing, your to-do list is endless, and your inner critic wonât shut the f*ck up. But self-compassion isnât just some feel-good phrase. Itâs a legitimate, research-backed practice that can transform how we navigate the world, especially during challenging and complex moments. At first, self-compassion may seem vague and impractical, and we often lack proper guidance on how to effectively ground ourselves in it.Â
Self-compassion is not about ignoring your mistakes or pretending everythingâs fine. Itâs about talking to yourself with the same patience and understanding you’d offer a good friend. Itâs recognizing that being imperfect, overwhelmed, or struggling doesnât mean youâre failing; it just means youâre human. Itâs a practical skill that can be implemented and refined, just like other skills.
For women, and especially women of color, self-compassion can feel even harder to access in a world that constantly asks us to do more, be more, and apologize for taking up space. The systems we live in were never designed to encourage self-acceptance or patience with ourselves. But itâs precisely why we need self-compassion. It helps us identify whatâs within our control, acknowledge our progress, and quiet self-criticism. Iâve learned (the hard way) that self-compassion is one of the most powerful tools I have. Itâs helped me bounce back after rejection, take breaks without guilt, and keep going, even when the odds feel stacked against me. Self-compassion has enabled me to stay rooted in my boundaries, forgive myself when I stray, and return to a place where I feel good about who I am.Â
We live in a daunting world where being kind to yourself isnât optional. Itâs part of how we survive, heal, and thrive. And every little moment, you choose grace over criticism? It counts. I know it can be challenging to put this into practice, so I want to help each of us find real ways to implement self-compassion wherever possible. Self-compassion may be precisely what you need to break free from the pressure to perform and reconnect with what truly matters to you.
Self-compassion isnât just a nice idea; itâs something you can use when life feels overwhelming and to restructure your thinking patterns. It can be evident in how you talk to yourself, handle mistakes, and make choices when youâre uncertain. It doesnât have to be a mysterious concept thatâs only available to the most disciplined of us. There may even be ways that youâre relying on self-compassion without even realizing it. The first step in cultivating more self-compassion is to understand how it can manifest in our lives. Hereâs what self-compassion can look like (drawing upon the research of self-compassion expert Dr. Kristen Neff):
đ«¶ Gentle Self Talk
Learn to talk nicely to yourself in the face of hardship and suffering. Instead of beating yourself up, try gentle reminders like, âIâm doing my best,â even when things donât go as planned. Be gentle with the way you see yourself and your actions.
đ Common Humanity
Remember, everyone struggles. Youâre not alone in your messiness or setbacks; thatâs just part of being human, and itâs happening to all of us all of the time.
đ§ Mindfulness
Notice your feelings without judgment. Itâs okay to feel stressed or sad. Pause and say, âThis is tough, and I can handle it.â Or let thoughts flow through you without labeling them as good or bad.
đŹ Growth Mindset
Catch harsh self-talk and reframe it: âIâm failingâ becomes âIâm learning.â Carol Dweckâs research shows our beliefs shape how far we go. A growth mindset isnât about perfection; itâs about progress.
đ€ Allow Rest
Permit yourself to slow down. Rest isnât a reward; itâs part of staying well and caring for yourself. Itâs extremely hard to be compassionate to ourselves if weâre constantly tired and overwhelmed.
đ€ Reach Out
Ask for support when you need it. Self-compassion involves recognizing that you donât have to do everything alone.
If self-compassion is so beneficial for us, why does it sometimes feel so uncomfortable?
Well, for starters, we have been taught the opposite of self-compassion our entire lives. From a young age, weâre conditioned to believe that being tough on ourselves is what makes us strong and responsible. Pushing harder, criticizing ourselves, and never letting up are often seen as the âonly wayâ to succeed. We grow up hearing messages like âPut others first,â âDonât be selfish,â or âYou have to prove yourself,â which all too often translate into ignoring our own needs and being harsh with ourselves.
We live in a culture that celebrates perfectionism, hustle, and âdoing it allâ, especially for women, who are often expected to juggle careers, relationships, family, health, and self-improvement without missing a beat.Â
So, it makes total sense that being gentle with ourselves feels awkward or even wrong. This kind of conditioning runs deep, like an unspoken rule we didnât even know we were following. The truth is, beating yourself up doesnât build resilience; it drains it. Real growth comes from feeling safe enough to make mistakes, learn from them, and try again. Thatâs what self-compassion creates: a steady, encouraging voice that says, âYouâre doing your best. Keep going.â
And no, this isnât about making excuses or lowering your standards. Research shows that individuals who practice self-compassion are more motivated, resilient, and better at recovering from setbacks than those who constantly tear themselves down.
Think of it like this: youâre way more likely to thrive when your inner voice sounds like a wise coach, not a drill sergeant yelling at you to GET IT TOGETHER. In a world that glorifies burnout and perfectionism, being kind to yourself isnât just self-care; itâs radical. And it can truly change everything.


You donât need to overhaul your whole life to start practicing self-compassion. Here are a few small but powerful ways to work it into your everyday life:
Give Your Inner Critic a Name:
We all have that voice in our head that loves to point out our flaws. Try giving it a name and a little character, like âJudgy Janetâ or âPerfect Paul.â It helps create space between you and the negativity. When they show up, you can just say, âThanks, but Iâm good today.â It feels silly, but it can be extremely powerful in helping you work through your thoughts.
Write to Your Inner Child:
When youâre overwhelmed or drowning in self-criticism, try writing a note to your younger self, the child still inside you. Speak to them with the love, safety, and reassurance they may not have gotten. Often, that harsh inner voice echoes a parent, teacher, or authority figure. Rewriting that message is how reparenting begins, with compassion, in your own words.
Use a Self-Compassion Mantra:
In challenging moments, repeat something simple like: âIâve done hard things before.â It helps you slow down, breathe, and respond from a gentler place rather than spiraling out of control.
Redefine Success
Being kind to yourself might mean redefining âsuccessâ and saying no when something doesnât align with your values.
Celebrate the Small Wins
Weâre great at noticing when we fall short. But what about the tiny victories? Got out of bed? Sent that scary email? Paused before snapping? Thatâs growth. Keep a little list of your wins, even the quiet ones. They matter more than you think.
Take âMicro-Momentsâ of Care
Self-compassion can manifest in small, everyday choices, such as drinking water before another cup of coffee, taking a five-minute break between tasks, and putting your phone down when your brain is tired. These small moments send a quiet message to yourself: I matter.
Curate Your Inputs
Sometimes, the kindest thing you can do is unfollow or mute accounts that make you feel less-than. Fill your feed with voices that uplift, support, and remind you of your worth, not ones that make you feel inadequate or behind.
Pencil Yourself In
If your calendar is full of meetings, chores, and helping othersââ, put yourself on there, too. Even if itâs just 15 minutes of quiet, a walk, or journaling, it doesnât have to be big to be meaningful.
Self-compassion isnât about getting it perfect; itâs about showing up for yourself with kindness, especially when things feel messy. Here are a few gentle reminders to carry with you:
Hereâs something simple to try: the next time you catch yourself spiraling âmaybe you missed a deadline, skipped the gym, lost your patience, or just had a rough day â pause and ask, âHow can I be kinder to myself at this moment?â. Itâs a small place to start, but it can make all the difference.
It may seem insignificant, but those small shifts in how we treat ourselves add up. Over time, they change our entire operating system and how we move through the world. Because of the relationship you have with yourself? Itâs the one that shapes everything else. And itâs worth nurturing.
Being kind to yourself isnât always easy. Trust me. On my journey, self-compassion has been one of the hardest things to cultivate. Itâs easy to get stuck in self-criticism and perfectionism and feel like you have to push harder all the time. But over time, Iâve learned that self-compassion is actually what keeps me grounded in my purpose. Itâs the steady, gentle voice that reminds me why I started, helps me get back up after setbacks, and gives me the strength to keep moving forward even when things feel challenging.
The good news? You donât have to do this alone. Together, we can create a space where itâs okay to be messy and to feel the full spectrum of human emotions without trying to fix or hide them. Self-compassion isnât about becoming a more polished or put-together version of yourself. Itâs about loving yourself as you are amid sadness, jealousy, anger, or shame, especially when you feel like you donât deserve it. Itâs also about feeling all of those emotions and not judging ourselves for it.
When we stop judging ourselves for having a hard time and begin meeting our pain with honesty and tenderness, we step into radical self-acceptance, the actual core of self-compassion. Itâs not a skill to perfect but a practice we return to again and again. The goal isnât to fix our feelings or sort them into âgoodâ or âbad.â Itâs to meet every emotion with gentleness and give ourselves full permission to feel all of it.
When we share our struggles and support each other, self-compassion stops being a lonely battle and becomes a shared practice, one that helps us all grow stronger.
Letâs start and continue on this journey by choosing kindness for ourselves and one another. Because the more we nurture our hearts, the more we can show up fully and authentically in the world. Weâve got this. đ

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