Posted September 2Sep 2 Why loving someone deeply changes you too. “Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves.” ― Carl Jung For the longest time, I thought self-love was something I had to do alone. Like I had to shut myself in a room, do some journaling, sip green tea, and meditate my way into self-acceptance. It was what was told to us- the self-help books, the productivity “guru”. And while those things helped, something else helped me much more than that. Something no one ever really talks about. Loving others helped me love myself. Truly, deeply, profoundly. It sounds ironic, I know. We’re told you have to love yourself before you love anyone else. And while I understand the intention behind that advice, it isn’t the full truth. Because in my case, and maybe in yours too loving someone else was the path home to myself. When I fell in love with my partner, I didn’t just love the “good” parts. I loved the quirks, the flaws, the inconsistencies. I loved the parts of him that didn’t match the world’s definition of perfection, but made me fall for him. And slowly, that love circled back to me. I saw how much patience I had with his emotions, but none with mine. How kind I was when he made mistakes, but so cruel to myself when I did. How I held space for all his contradictions but refused to allow my own. And that’s when I started realizing: Loving him meant making peace with the parts of me I kept rejecting. He was my mirror. A raw, messy, human mirror. The more I showed love outward, the more love grew inward. The more I accepted his fears, his past, his imperfections—the more I made room for my own. Psychologists call this the shadow: the part of you that you hide, suppress, deny. And sometimes, the things you judge in others are actually just unaccepted fragments of yourself. But here’s the secret: when you learn to love what you once rejected in someone else, you begin the lifelong work of integrating your own shadow. You begin to become whole. And it wasn’t just my partner. I started noticing it in everyone. The friend I envied? She mirrored the parts of me I still doubted. The stranger I judged? They reflected a fear I hadn’t faced. Even the people who annoyed me, they held up a mirror to the parts of me that still needed understanding and forgiveness. Loving others, even when it was hard, even when I didn’t understand them, slowly became a way of making peace with my own humanity. We often think we’re reacting to them-their habits, their personalities, their words, but most of the time, we’re really reacting to ourselves. To the shadow within us that they accidentally stirred up. To the wound that was already there. That’s why relationships (romantic, platonic, familial) can be such fertile ground for growth if we let them. They confront us with ourselves. They show us the truth. And they invite us to respond not with defense but with curiosity. It used to be easy to criticize. Easy to pull away. Easy to think, “If only they were different.” But now, more often than not, I ask myself, “What is this moment trying to teach me about myself?” And that question has changed a lot for me. Because loving someone fully means seeing them clearly. Not idealizing. Not fixing. Not projecting. Just seeing and choosing love anyway. And when I apply that same lens to myself… I feel safer in my own skin. Self-love has never felt like a finish line for me. It’s more like a muscle. And loving the people in my life, especially when it’s hard, has been the most powerful way of strengthening that muscle. Final Reflection So if you’re struggling to love yourself, maybe don’t start by looking inward so intensely. Maybe start by looking around. Look at the people you love. Look at the parts of them that make you smile—their chaos, their calm, their fire, their fear. See how easily you hold space for them. Now try holding that same space for you. Because love doesn’t just flow in one direction. Sometimes, loving others is the first step to loving yourself. And maybe the deepest healing isn’t found in isolation but in connection. — Anushka & Vishnu — This post was previously published on medium.com. Love relationships? We promise to have a good one with your inbox. Subcribe to get 3x weekly dating and relationship advice. Did you know? We have 8 publications on Medium. Join us there! Hello, Love (relationships) Change Becomes You (Advice) A Parent is Born (Parenting) Equality Includes You (Social Justice) Greener Together (Environment) Shelter Me (Wellness) Modern Identities (Gender, etc.) Co-Existence (World) *** – Photo credit: Mathilde Langevin on Unsplash The post How Loving Others Can Help You Build Self-Love appeared first on The Good Men Project. View the full article
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