Be Your Own Valentine: Love Who You Are

Ellevate Network
5 min readFeb 18, 2022

By: Caroline Dowd-Higgins

It’s the time of year for cards with red hearts, chocolates, and flowers as Valentine’s Day approaches. It causes anxiety for some who are seeking affection, and bliss for others who are celebrating their love with someone special.

This Valentine’s Day, I encourage you to see it through a different lens. By all means, celebrate your beloved, but designate time to honor yourself on the holiday when we focus on love. When was the last time you really concentrated on yourself without guilt or concern for everybody else in your world?

Prioritizing yourself is not selfish or greedy, but an act of self-preservation and gratitude that allows you to be a better, spouse, partner, parent, sibling, friend, or colleague. These action steps will give you techniques if paying attention to yourself is difficult.

Say “I love you” to yourself.

Declaring your love for another is the ultimate confirmation of affection — but have you ever said “I love you!” to yourself? Loving yourself is essential to boost self-confidence and self-acceptance and you deserve to love yourself just as you give your love to others.

We spend a lot of time beating ourselves up about body image, confidence, what we lack, and what we have yet to accomplish. Take a moment and look at yourself in the mirror and declare your love for yourself. This self-recognition will actually help you to ignore the obnoxious roommate in your head that can lead your mojo astray. Start the day with the beautiful ritual of declaring your love for yourself and honor your body, since it’s the only one you’ve got.

Heighten your senses.

In a time-starved world with the constant struggle of integrating the personal and professional, we often miss the joy of our senses. Taste, smell, and enjoy the look of your food, for example. If you are wolfing down your lunch at your desk, you are not loving and honoring yourself, or your food.

Enjoy the quiet moments as well as the cacophony of noise and sense your world on a deeper level. My husband gave me an unexpected bear hug the other day, which was the perfect antidote to the stress I was feeling. Open your senses wide and experience the little things that make life extraordinary — like the sense of touch.

[Related: Combining Entrepreneurship and Legacy as a Formula for Success]

Embrace failure.

I believe in the power of failure. I have learned to fail forward, fast, and often, and I embrace change and see risk taking as a new opportunity ready to be discovered. Give yourself permission to fail. Love yourself for trying new things and expanding your comfort zone. If it doesn’t work out — move in a different direction. Self-forgiveness opens up room for gratitude, growth, and love.

Define yourself by your potential.

Many practice self-loathing because they undervalue their efforts and only focus on achievement. Love yourself for trying and celebrate your determination, not just your results.

Advocate for yourself.

As an executive coach, I witness many who will go to bat for others. I see professionals who sing the praises of their colleagues, yet they often lack the ability to promote or advocate for themselves.

Keep helping others, because it’s the right thing to do and it will make you a better person and a better leader. But don’t sell yourself short. If you can’t stand up for yourself and show the world what you have to offer — nobody else will.

[Related: Use Intuition to Guide Your Career Moves]

Write a love note to yourself.

My husband often leaves me little notes with loving and humorous sentiments. I cherish these and save them in a box. I know parents who send their kids to school with a pick me up message in a lunch box.

Why not write yourself a love note and remind yourself how amazing you are? Leave it in a place you will discover unexpectedly and celebrate yourself. There is enough negative talk in the world — we need more love notes, even if you write your own.

Do something for yourself.

It’s common to spend much of your time caring and doing for others — both at home and at work. A dear friend just lost her spouse after his multi-year battle with a terminal illness. She has been a caregiver for years and is struggling with creating her new identity and the opportunity to focus on herself since she had prioritized her husband and her kids for so long.

Make a point to schedule things just for you. Whether it’s a walk in nature, a special getaway, or a quiet evening to read or catching up on Netflix — take the time to focus on you.

Do what you love.

Bad jobs, bad bosses, and bad organizations happen, but suffering is optional. Develop a plan to find your bliss vocationally in your career, and avocationally in your hobbies and free time.

Remember that laughter is the best remedy for stress and if you are doing what you love — laugher and smiling will be part of your daily ritual.

The late Diane von Furstenberg, fashion icon and creator of her signature wrap dress shared:

The most important relationship in life is the one you have with yourself. And if you have that, any other relationship is a plus and not a must.

Be open to love from others and know that you alone are in control of loving yourself first. This Valentine’s Day, say, “I love you!” and celebrate yourself in addition to the others you love. You deserve it!

[Related: How to Ask for a Raise: Advice from Inspirational Businesswomen]

Caroline Dowd-Higgins authored the book “This Is Not the Career I Ordered” and maintains the career reinvention blog of the same name. She is Vice President of Career Coaching and Employer Connections for the Ivy Tech Community College system and contributes to Thrive Global, Ellevate Network, Medium, and The Chronicle newspaper in Indiana. Her online video series about career and life empowerment for women is on YouTube. She hosts the three-time award winning podcast, Your Working Life, on iTunes, Spotify, and SoundCloud. Follow her on Facebook, LinkedIn, Google+, and Twitter. Her TEDxWOMEN talk about reframing failure and defining success on your own terms is available on YouTube.

Originally published at https://www.ellevatenetwork.com.

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