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ยป Home ยป Turning Inwards

How to Love Yourself (No Bullsh*t Guide)

by Aletheia Luna ยท Updated: Apr 2, 2025 ยท 202 Comments

Image of a heart on the sand representing how to love yourself more
self-love guide

Learning how to love yourself can be pretty f*cking hard.

Iโ€™m going to be realistic here.

While many articles, books, speakers, and spiritual teachers paint an ethereal glow around self-love …ย beginning to even get to a space where you’re ready to “love yourself” often happens after a ton of gritty inner work and soul-searching.


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There are simply no shortcuts here.

For example:

  • How can you learn how to love yourself more when your mind is literally at war with itself?
  • How can you learn to love yourself when you hate what you see in the mirror?
  • How can you learn how to love yourself when your environment is positively toxic and depressing?
  • How can you learn how to love yourself when you have no positive role models?
  • How can you learn how to love yourself more when people label you as being selfish and neglectful?

How, how, how?

While I donโ€™t profess to know all the answers, I do know that there’s no magical wand that suddenly makes you more self-loving.

After being on this path for years, moving from literal physical self-harm to a daily self-compassion practice, working through a lot of my deep-seated trauma, and helping others to do the same, I’ve had some big realizations and breakthroughs.


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Although this article wonโ€™t directly answer all the above questions, it will provide the tools, techniques, teachings, and resources you’ll need to make the big changes.

Also, if you’d like a step-by-step guided approach, check out our self-love journal.


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So from my heart to yours, I sincerely hope this article helps to catalyze deep and nourishing changes in your life.

Table of contents

  • What is Self-Love?
  • 18 Profound Benefits of Self-Love
  • Why is it So Damn Hard For Us to Love Ourselves?
  • Is Self-Love Selfish?
  • What Science Says About Self-Love
  • The Dark Side of Self-Love
  • How to Prevent Others From Dragging You Down
  • Is it Possible to “Love Yourself Unconditionally”?
  • How to Love Yourself More (7 Practices)
  • 21+ Empowering Self-Love Quotes

What is Self-Love?

Image of a heart-shaped wave symbolic of how to love yourself

In short, self-love is the practice of unconditional compassion, forgiveness, acceptance, and respect for yourself โ€“ all of your beautiful and wounded parts included.

When you love yourself, you take care of yourself, honor your limitations, listen to your needs, and respect your dreams enough to act on them.

When you love yourself, your happiness, health, and fulfillment are all of the supreme importance because you realize that by loving yourself, youโ€™re also able to love others more wholly and fully.

18 Profound Benefits of Self-Love

Image of a ball of heart-shaped fire symbolic of spiritual transformation

Self-love illuminates, improves, and deepens every aspect of life. Here are some of the many benefits of learning how to love yourself more:

  • More tolerance of your flaws and weaknesses
  • Heightened self-confidence
  • Increased self-forgiveness
  • Healthier mindset (and less self-sabotaging thoughts)
  • Improved ability to discover and fulfill your personal destiny
  • Increased love, acceptance, and compassion for yourself
  • More love, acceptance, and compassion for others
  • Improved relationships
  • Better friendships
  • More satisfying work life
  • More authentic connections with people
  • Enhanced joy and gratitude for life
  • Increased playfulness, creativity, and spontaneity
  • Higher levels of self-trust
  • Healthier and wiser choices
  • Increased access to new opportunities
  • Improved mental health (and less anxiety + depression)
  • Deeper access to one’s Soul and spiritual path

I could probably go on for another few pages. But these are the most immediate benefits that come to mind.

Perhaps what is most satisfying about learning how to love yourself more is that it opens your heart, giving you access to your deeper, truer self โ€“ your Soul.

Why is it So Damn Hard For Us to Love Ourselves?

Image of a sad disturbed man who wants to learn how to love yourself

“Why is it so damn hard for us to love ourselves?” The short answer to this questions is that most of us were raised in a society (and likely a family) that failed to teach us about self-love.

All throughout our early lives, we were taught how to read, write, calculate, build, theorize, study, and analyze life. We were taught how to say โ€œpleaseโ€ and โ€œthank you,โ€ as well as what was acceptable and unacceptable to others and society at large โ€ฆ but most of us were never educated in one essential dimension of life: self-love.

Something that continues to shock me about my own upbringing was the distinct lack of emphasis on growing healthy self-acceptance and self-worth.

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As a child I never can recall being taught the value of loving oneself, setting healthy boundaries, knowing how to say โ€œnoโ€ and โ€œyesโ€ when you mean it, and learning to take care of yourself. Instead, I was taught how to be a good martyr; sacrificing my mental and emotional health for the needs of others. And while I donโ€™t blame my family (because they were a product of their own times), I can see how neglecting to love myself led to a cascade of mental, emotional, and physical problems.

If you were raised in a culture and society similar to my own, you were probably conditioned in a similar way to โ€œput others before yourselfโ€ and not give much consideration to your own needs.

Typically, self-denial and self-sacrifice are the two main values taught in our childhoods and continue to be elevated as the markers of a โ€œkind, caring, and worthy human beingโ€ to this very day.

Unfortunately, what I learned later in life was that these two values (self-denial and self-sacrifice) taught me nothing more than the profound emotional and psychological pain of being a self-imposed martyr with no real understanding of how to take care of myself โ€“ or others for that matter!

The result of not being taught the value of self-love in childhood and adopting the socially acceptable guise of being a martyr is depression, bitterness, anxiety, resentment,ย and profoundly flimsy self-esteem.

However, even though you may not have been taught how to love yourself growing up, the door of opportunity is still open to you.

But before we walk through that door, let’s explore one massive myth associated with self-love (and perpetuated by the same society that taught you to be an externally-focused martyr).

Is Self-Love Selfish?

Image of a selfish self-obsessed woman staring at herself in the mirror

Every now and then you may hear explicitly stated or implied that self-love is selfish.

Perhaps you live in a family that condemns any form of self-care and celebrates toxic self-sacrifice and martyrdom instead. Or maybe you work in an environment where self-love is scoffed at or seen cynically.

Whatever the case, it’s important to nip this massive misconception in the bud.

Self-love isn’t selfish. Why? Because without taking care of yourself, you are incapable of truly taking care of others.

Self-love actually benefitsย otherย people, not just yourself. When you’re able to genuinely love and accept yourself, you’re able to love and accept others much more fully.

To use an analogy, how can an empty cup be used to quench the thirst of another? It’s impossible. Likewise, it’s impossible for us to give love if we havenโ€™t first filled ourselves. Simple.

It’s a well-known psychological fact that mistreatment of yourself results in the mistreatment of others. As professor of educational psychology Kristin Neff writes:

Self-compassion involves treating yourself with the same kindness, concern, and support youโ€™d show to a good friend. When faced with difficult life struggles, or confronting personal mistakes, failures, and inadequacies, self-compassion responds with kindness rather than harsh self-judgment, recognizing that imperfection is part of the shared human experience.

Neff talks more about self-compassion (or self-love) in this video.


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So the next time you start feeling guilty for dedicating time to yourself or caring for your own needs, remind yourself that by practicing self-love you’re actually strengthening your ability to love others.

What Science Says About Self-Love

Image of an indigo blue heart

Numerous studies have shown that learning how to love ourselves is beneficial.

Here are some examples of findings that have been discovered:

  • Self-acceptance is the key to living a happier life (source)
  • Self-compassion results in making better health decisions (source)
  • Self-kindness results in less anxiety and depression (source)
  • Self-compassion reduces the stress that leads to procrastination (source)
  • Self-care can help you reach your goals (source)
  • Self-love can support you through adversity (source)

Contrary to popular belief, learning how to love yourself isn’t new age woo woo โ€“ it is actually one of the smartest decisions you can ever make in your life.

The Dark Side of Self-Love

Image of a depressed woman struggling to experience self-love

Yes, learning how to love yourself more might feel all warm and fuzzy inside.

But it’s not always sunshine and roses.

The truth is that most people may not in truth want to support you (however, there are some exceptions, so hold onto those people!).

Not only that, but society at large will continue to bombard you with toxic subliminal messages, such as:

  1. You have to make people like and accept you.
  2. You have to put other’s needs above your own all the time with no exception.
  3. You have to conform to the status quo and fit in.

And when it comes to the people around you, you might pick up on this unspoken message:

4. You have to be unhappy and discontent โ€“ just like us.ย 

The reality is that most people donโ€™t like being truly happy: instead, they prefer comfort, stability, security, and control.

Why? Because safety and predictability is the most comfortable way to live according to dominant sociocultural standards.

Unfortunately, the childlike mindset of needing to seek safety is precisely what makes (most) people so hesitant and blatantly (or subtly) resistant to support your self-love journey.

You Become a Threat:

When you walk the path less traveled, you directly contradict what others have invested so much of their lifetime effort into: cultivating comfort and mediocrity.

Inevitably, you become a threat.

Dark Night of the Soul Test image

By challenging people to reconsider their choices, actions, and mindsets through your behavior, you unintentionally trigger self-doubt and therefore fear in others. And very few people are brave enough to honestly look at themselves and change.

At some point we have to face the (rarely mentioned) truth that when you start practicing self-love, you become a social heretic. You stick out. You stop fitting in. You cease being one of the misery-loves-company crewย who thrive on self-pity and cynicism.

And suddenly this puts you in a very uncomfortable position, a position where you have to choose between taking the narrow path, or the wide and easy path.

Some of us give up. Others of us persist, but end up withering away under the weight of social pressure. Both of these struggles are totally understandable and normal. Thankfully life gives us many choices to bounce back and reorient our paths.

For those of us who do manage to get back up and continue on that winding path, it’s inevitable that we’ll find ourselves pushing against what feels like a never-ending onslaught of โ€œyouโ€™re not good enough,โ€ โ€œyou should be like us,โ€ โ€œyou arenโ€™t worth it,โ€ โ€œyouโ€™re so selfish.โ€

But it gets easier with time and practice, I promise.

Loving yourself, truly and deeply loving yourself in this era, is a breathtaking accomplishment.

In fact, I’d say you deserve a downright party thrown in your honor just for having the guts to walk this path!

How to Prevent Others From Dragging You Down

Image of a person holding a red electric heart

As we’ve just explored, you’ll inevitably be faced with people who disagree, disapprove of, or outright challenge your desire to make self-love a way of life.

Here’s how to see the bigger picture and stop them from bringing you down:

1. Realize that other people are scared and in pain

One big element of learning how to love yourself more is training yourself to not take other’s treatment of you personally.

Ask yourself, how can a person who only knows self-sacrifice and self-abandonment give you approval and acceptance? Thatโ€™s like expecting a baby to climb a mountain. It doesnโ€™t happen, and it canโ€™t happen.

Therefore, what’s the point of getting wound up and unhappy over the people in your life who not only donโ€™t support you but also speak against you? Unfortunately, their very actions speak of their abject lack of self-love. Isnโ€™t that so very sad?

Most people not only fail to possess self-love, but theyโ€™re also caught up in an Underworld of fear and pain.ย Fear and pain are sourced from the illusion that we’re separate from Life โ€“ that we’re humans having a life experience, rather than Life itself having a human experience.

Once you realize that people are basically scared and in pain a lot of the time, it takes out the harsh sting from their disapproving stares and mistreatment of you. It also frees up the energy within you to provide yourself with even more self-love.

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Once this realization hits you (in the heart, not just the head), you eventually stop reacting to their negativity and start feeling compassion for them instead. And it’s this precise compassion that befuddles them, yet is also sometimes enough to motivate them to try the same path.

[Read: Why Are People So Mean, Rude, and Nasty?]

2. Realize that how other people treat you is a reflection of how they treat themselves

It hurts to be the only one in your social circle trying to take responsibility for your life. It hurts to be rejected by your friends, family, or both because you’re taking a different path.

Learning how to love yourself more undeniably HURTS BADLY sometimes, and other times it feels blissful and wondrous. But if there’s any lesson you can take away from the way people treat you, it is this: their actions mirror how they treat themselves.

Do you think that a person who mistreats you thinks they’re superior to you? More often than not the answer is a big fat โ€œno.โ€ They mistreat you because they are threatened by you in some way, shape, or form. Unless they are clinically diagnosed narcissists or psychopaths, most people are deeply insecure and fearful, not simply nasty for the sake of it.

The more you go against the grain, the more threatening you become to such insecure people. Understanding this, your ability to practice self-love becomes much easier.

Is it Possible to “Love Yourself Unconditionally”?

Image of a happy man staring at the sun symbolic of learning how to love yourself

Unless you’ve reached a high level of spiritual maturity or some kind of nondual state of Oneness (and even then, such experiences fluctuate), then self-love isn’t generally something that comes naturally. Instead, you must work for it.

As spiritual beings having a human experience, our lives are characterized by highs, lows, and plateaus.

In some periods of our lives, we’ll celebrate who we are and feel confident in our abilities. In other periods (aka., during a life crisis or even Dark Night of the Soul), we’ll feel insecure, ugly, fat, messy, unlovable, and altogether shitty. This is all NORMAL. In fact, you might go through this cycle within one weekย or even a day!

The important thing here is to embed self-love deeply into your daily inner work or spiritual practice. Then, when the time comes and you’re challenged, you’ll be able to practice mindfulness and awareness. Instead of getting swept up in self-loathing, you’ll be capable of practicing self-compassion. Instead of neglecting your body, you’ll know when to practice self-care.

(And even if you do struggle to practice self-love during these darker moments โ€“ which happens to all of us โ€“ you’ll be more prone to catching and stopping the tirade of negative thoughts in your mind.)

Yes, you might occasionally experience mystical moments of complete self-love and acceptance โ€“ but these are fleeting moments that don’t last. To make self-love and acceptance more of a consistent experience, you have to practice it consciously every.single.day. No excuses!

So the message here is this:

Don’t be upset if you alternate between self-love and self-hatred. Having “unconditional self-love” is an unrealistic standard โ€“ it’s normal to go through ups and downs. But the more you practice embracing yourself each and every day, the more you’ll be able to deal with what life throws at you.

Relax.

Give yourself a break.

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Remember thatย “attaining” self-love can be just another thing you use to beat yourself up and feel like a failure.ย 

So slow down. Go easy on yourself. And as author Matt Kahn writes, “Whatever arises, love that.” These words essentially mean that you can practice accepting and forgiving all things that arise in you, even (and especially) including your insecurity, shame, guilt, and self-judgment.

How to Love Yourself More (7 Practices)

Image of writing on the beach that says "love"

Let’s get to the practical meat and bones here. Here are the seven life lessons I’ve learned about how to love yourself more:

1. Learn to be discerning and say โ€œNO, thatโ€™s not trueโ€

You’ll hear a lot of blatant and subliminal messages on your path.

You’ll be told that your body isnโ€™t slim enough, your face isnโ€™t pretty enough, your personality isnโ€™t charming enough, making mistakes is unacceptable, taking care of your needs is selfish โ€ฆ yadda, yadda, yadda.

Not all of these false and unhealthy perceptions will be immediately obvious. Some of them will creep into your mind and belief system, and pollute your self-perception. In fact, many of these toxic perceptions probably have already.

Not many people talk about discernment when it comes to learning how to love yourself more.

โ€œDiscernmentโ€ is largely a dull-sounding word, but it is SO important. For instance, how can you tell truth from lies without learning how to be discerning?

To learn how to be discerning you need to question everything. Yes, this can be tiring, but it’s worth every ounce of your effort. Why? The answer is that being discerning will help you to sort through a lot of mental rubbish, antiquated beliefs, and harmful ideals.

Learning to say โ€œNO, thatโ€™s not trueโ€ or ask, “Is that actually true?” helps you to discover what the truth actually is. And the truth is always grounded in love (but again, you will have to discover this for yourself).

The more discernment and therefore clarity you have, the more you’ll be able to support and care for yourself.

2. Be your own best friend

Image of a woman holding a red rose symbolic of self-love

Are you your own mortal enemy?

If most of us spoke to others the way we spoke to ourselves, we’d be universally hated!

You’re with yourself 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, and you are with yourself through all the glory and all the pain. Doesn’t it make sense to be best friends with yourself? Wouldn’t that make your life so much easier?

To practice self-love, it’s important for us to consciously change our relationships with ourselves, and treat ourselves with compassion and consideration just as we would with a best friend.


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So my question for you is this: how close are you with yourself? Do you give yourself pep talks as a best friend would? Do you treat yourself to fun and exciting activities you love? Are you there to hold your own hand when things get messy?

If your answer is “no” or “rarely” or even “sometimes” it’s time to do things differently. Explore what it feels like being your own best friend. What one activity can you do this week that honors this philosophy?

3. Change the way you perceive your flaws

Image of a glass globe reflecting a man in the background

As spiritual teacher Jeff Foster puts it:

Donโ€™t judge your sadness, your depression, your feelings of unworthiness so quickly, and donโ€™t judge the sorrows of another, for you really donโ€™t know whatโ€™s best for anyone, for you really donโ€™t know more than life itself. That which you reject (in another or in yourself) may actually be much-needed medicine, a misunderstood teacher, inviting you to a self-love deeper than you ever thought possible. It may be a threshold guardian, a gatekeeper of a forgotten kingdom!

Instead of seeing our guilt, jealousy, anger, fear, and sadness as a terrible curse, see them as opportunities to grow. Realize thatย everyoneย struggles with these universal human emotions. We ALL feel insecure at times, and that’s perfectly okay.

I remember how difficult it was for me to change the way I perceived my imperfection. Every time someone pointed out a flaw of mine or criticized me in any way, I would feel depressed, angry, and defensive.

One day, my partner said, “Instead of getting all sad and mopey, why not see this as anย opportunityย to grow?” To be honest, I wanted to punch him in the face right there and then. But after a few months, I thought “what the hell!” and gave it a try.

What a vast difference it made to my life! Instead of getting defensive, I would feel the sting to my ego but another part of me would feel gratitude, gratitude for the chance to grow.

So give this mindset switch a try. See what happens when you start perceiving your imperfection as an opportunity to grow. See what happens when you meet inner challenges with gratitude.

4. Practice loving all that arises and healthy self-judgment

Image of a woman holding up hands that form a love heart symbolic of how to love yourself

Critical self-judgment is the antithesis of self-love. The core reason why we struggle so much with self-love in the first place is that we judge and reject ourselves.

Don’t get me wrong. Self-judgment isn’t always a bad thing. We need to be able to measure up our ability to achieve certain tasks at work, as well as understand our strengths and weakness to make smart choices. Not only that, but self-judgment can actually save our lives (e.g., deciding not to drive after judging that we’re too drunk) and it also prevents us from being assholes if we need to change our behavior.

But, here’s the thing. Self-judgment becomes toxic when it’s used to negatively minimize, bad-mouth, shame or otherwise harm ourselves.

Unfortunately, most of us are in the habit of misusing self-judgment. Thanks to our conditioning as children, it’s actually socially acceptable to be abusive toward ourselves because that’s what everyone else has been doing for a long time.

One powerful โ€“ but not necessarily easy โ€“ practice, is learning to love all that arises within you. When I write “love” what I mean is embracing and accepting theย comfortable and uncomfortable things within you.

As writer and teacher Matt Kahn explains:

Instead of trying to shift your feelings, just love the one who canโ€™t stop feeling. Instead of trying to resolve each fear, simply love the one whoโ€™s always afraid.

Instead of trying to not take things personally, just love the one who came here to make like personal. Instead of trying to prove your worth, simply love the one who feels worthless, lost, ashamed, and alone.

Instead of trying to leap forward in evolution, just love the one who feels left behind. Instead of having something to prove, simply love the one who came here to play.

Instead of bossing yourself around and measuring your progress through spiritual obedience, just love the one who refuses to listen. Instead of trying to believe, simply love the one in doubt. Instead of trying whatever you attempt, just love the one who needs permission to be.

Whatever arises โ€“ love that.

This seemingly ‘simple’ acceptance practice actually takes a lot of effort and can be strengthened through daily practices such as contemplation, mindfulness, and meditation. You can apply this philosophy to anything in life โ€“ even theย inabilityย to love all that arises is an opportunity to forgive and accept yourself!


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However, as a side note, acceptance must be balanced with judgment. If we’re physically abusive toward our partners, for example, we obviously don’t want to “accept” that behavior โ€“ that would be spiritual bypassing and a blatant misuse of this self-love concept.

Serious self-judgment of our actions needs to be brought into the picture, particularly when we’re being toxic or harmful toward others. In this case, judgment can actually be a form of self-love that prevents us from further hurting others, and therefore ourselves.

5. Learn the art of self-care

Image of a white journal on a table with candles in the background

Most of us are terribly disconnected from our bodies, minds, hearts, and Souls.

We live in a world that encourages us to be externally-focused and outwardly driven.

On the other hand, learning how to love yourself is about going in theย opposite directionย and taking your energy and directing it inwards.

There areย endlessย ways to practice self-care. I explore 39 different ideas in my self-care article, but to get you started, I recommend starting with your body.

Spend time each day connecting with your physicality and explore what you need. Perhaps you’re tired and need more sleep, maybe your muscles ache and you need to do some stretches, or you might even need a good nutritious meal.

These practices may seem simple, but they send a very direct and powerful message to yourย conscious and unconscious mind that you are worthy of being cared for!

6. Be your own advocate and stand up for yourself

Image of a woman with hands over her heart feeling self-love

Being your own advocate means exploring what your needs are and respecting them, which is a form of self-love.

What is non-negotiable or a deal-breaker in your life? What are your deeply cherished values? What are your boundaries? Standing up for what you believe in is a form of self-respect.

To be your own best advocate, a good place to start is exploring what’s making you feel unhappy, depressed or overwhelmed in your life. What lines are being crossed? In which areas do you feel used or taken for granted? What makes you feel unsafe?

You might like to explore these questions in your journal (and if you don’t journal already, check out my how to start journaling article to get started).

Remember that being assertive about your needs and values isn’t a synonym for being an obnoxious asshole.

You don’t need to be loud, angry or emotionally reactive to be an advocate for yourself โ€“ that approach will backfire very quickly.

Instead, healthy assertiveness is about honoring yourself while at the same time being respectful towards others. Some mantras or affirmations that you might like to repeat to yourself to practice healthy assertiveness include:


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  • “I calmly and firmly honor my needs.”
  • “I respect my needs in a gentle and assertive way.”
  • “I allow myself to say no clearly and respectfully.”
  • “I honor my needs, values, and feelings always.”
  • “I create clear and consistent boundaries that protect my energy.”
  • “I have the right to defend my needs and desires.”
  • “I am clear but kind about my personal boundaries.”

You can also take these mantras or affirmations and create some of your own!

7. Explore the core beliefs that keep you small

Image of a man with a snake and apple

First, I want to start by saying that exploring your core beliefs is DEEP work. Although it may not seem like it at first, diving into the dark nether regions of your mind is an act of self-love.

Excavating your core beliefs (i.e., the main ideas you have about yourself) can and will transform your life if you know how to do it properly. For a more in-depth overview, check out our core beliefs and shadow work articles.

For the sake of clarity, I’ll give you a few helpful examples of core beliefs. Common ones include “I am bad,” “There’s something innately wrong with me,” “I’m not worth it,” “I’m unlovable,” and “I’m irrevocably broken.”

There are many ways to uncover and change your core beliefs. One practice I have recently discovered is how powerful the use of a mirror can be.

Stand in front of a mirror in your house and designate at least ten minutes to be alone and undisturbed with yourself. Then, simply look at yourself. Gaze into your eyes. What emotions and thoughts emerge?

Mirror work is one of the most direct and dynamic ways of uncovering your self-talk and core beliefs. Pay attention to inner dialogue that sounds like the following: “I look so ugly,” “This is stupid,” “There’s something wrong with me,” and notice what type of thoughts and feelings you keep having.ย 

Then, enfold your body in a hug, look at yourself and say, “It’s okay, I am here for you, I accept you” (or whatever feels the most loving and authentic to you). Write about your experience in your journal afterwards to help integrate the experience.

21+ Empowering Self-Love Quotes

Image of a heart on a pink background symbolic of how to love yourself more

To end this article,ย Iโ€™ll leave you with a few more perspectives on learning how to love yourself from a variety of writers, thinkers, poets, psychologists, and mystics.

Take a few moments to contemplate what you read and let it sink down into your blood, bones, and marrow.

Sometimes a simple word, sentence, or idea has the power to spark deep epiphanies that can create gentle yet large ripple effects in your life:

Do you want to meet the love of your life? Look in the mirror.

โ€“ Byron Katie

Compassionate toward yourself, you reconcile all beings in the world.

โ€” Lao Tzu

To love oneself is the beginning of a life-long romance.

โ€“ Oscar Wilde

You have been criticizing yourself for years, and it hasnโ€™t worked. Try approving of yourself and see what happens.

โ€“ Louise L. Hay

The more self-love we have, the less we will experience self-abuse. Self-abuse comes from self-rejection, and self-rejection comes from having an image of what it means to be perfect and never measuring up to that ideal. Our image of perfection is the reason we reject ourselves; it is why we donโ€™t accept ourselves the way we are, and why we donโ€™t accept others the way they are.

โ€“ Don Miguel Ruiz, The Four Agreements

Your problem is youโ€™re too busy holding onto your unworthiness.

โ€“ Ram Dass

When I loved myself enough, I began leaving whatever wasnโ€™t healthy. This meant people, jobs, my own beliefs and habits โ€“ anything that kept me small. My judgement called it disloyal. Now I see it as self-loving.

โ€“ Kim McMillen

If you can discover your essential beauty, in spite of all your problems and imperfections, you are on the way toward well-being. A preliminary step is simply to accept yourself with all your failures and imperfections. You must get the ego out of the wayโ€”the thought that you are so exalted that in your refined state you would be perfect. Acceptance is the beginning of genuine and honest self-love, a requirement for perceiving your own beauty.

โ€“ Thomas Moore,ย Dark Nights of the Soul

You yourself, as much as anybody in the entire universe deserve your love and affection.

โ€“ Anonymous

You alone are enough. You have nothing to prove to anyone.

โ€“ Maya Angelou

Loving yourself isn’t vanity. It is sanity.

โ€“ Katrina Mayer

Being true to who we are means carrying our spirit like a candle in the center of our darkness. If we are to live without silencing or numbing essential parts of who we are, a vow must be invoked and upheld within oneself. The same commitments we pronounce when embarking on a marriage can be understood internally as a devotion to the care of one’s soul: to have and to hold โ€ฆ for better or for worse โ€ฆ in sickness and in health โ€ฆ to love and to cherish, till death do us part. This means staying committed to your inner path. This means not separating from yourself when things get tough or confusing. This means accepting and embracing your faults and limitations. It means loving yourself no matter how others see you. It means cherishing the unchangeable radiance that lives within you, no matter the cuts and bruises along the way.

โ€“ Mark Nepo, Theย Book of Awakening

Self-love isn’t always so poetic; sometimes it’s a nice big triple backflip kick in the ass. You’ve got to call yourself on your own nonsense; on the incredibly efficient way you can be self-destructive.

โ€“ Steve Maraboli

And I said to my body, softly, “I want to be your friend.” It took a long breath and replied, “I have been waiting my whole life for this.”

โ€“ Nayyirah Waheed

The relationship with yourself sets the tone for every other relationship you have.

โ€“ Jane Travis

I now see how owning our story and loving ourselves through that process is the bravest thing that we will ever do.

โ€“ Brene Brown

Self-love, self-respect, self-worth. There is a reason they all start with “self.” You can not find them in anyone else.

โ€“ Unknown

If your compassion does not include yourself, it is incomplete.

โ€“ Jack Kornfield

Self-love is the foundation of our loving practice. Without it our other efforts to love fail. Giving ourselves love we provide our inner being with the opportunity to have the unconditional love we may have always longed to received from someone else.

โ€“ Bell Hooks

The privilege of a lifetime is to become who you truly are.

โ€“ Carl Jung

To be beautiful means to be yourself. You donโ€™t need to be accepted by others. You need to accept yourself.

โ€“ Thich Nhat Hanh

I wouldn’t want to belong to a club that would have me as a member.

โ€• Groucho Marx

There are millions of ways to express your happiness, but there is only one way to really be happy, and that is to love. There is no other way. You cannot be happy if you donโ€™t love yourself. That is a fact. If you donโ€™t love yourself, you donโ€™t have any opportunity to be happy. You cannot share what you do not have. If you do not love yourself, you cannot love anyone else either.

โ€“ Don Miguel Ruiz, The Mastery of Love

So โ€ฆ

What is your experience with self-love?

And what has been the hardest part of learning how to love yourself?

I donโ€™t know about you, but Iโ€™m inspired each time you drop by and leave a comment, so I’d love to hear your story below.

If you need more help, we offer 3 powerful ways to guide you on your inner journey:

1. The Spiritual Wanderer Course: Feeling lost or uncertain about your path and purpose in life? Gain clarity and focus by learning about the five archetypes of awakening within you. Discover your deeper path and purpose using our in-depth psychospiritual map. Includes 3+ hours of audio-visual content, workbooks, meditations, and a premium test.

2. Shadow & Light Membership: Seeking ongoing support for your spiritual journey? Receive weekly intuitive guidance and learn to embrace your whole self, including your shadow side. Deepen your self-love and receive personal support from us.

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About Aletheia Luna

Aletheia Luna is a prolific psychospiritual writer, author, educator, and intuitive guide whose work has touched the lives of millions worldwide. As a survivor of fundamentalist religious abuse, her mission is to help others find love, strength, and inner light in even the darkest places. She is the author of hundreds of popular articles, as well as numerous books and journals on the topics of Self-Love, Spiritual Awakening, and more. [Read More]

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  1. Clara says

    September 20, 2022 at 1:02 am

    Thank you, both for a touching, uplifting and enjoyable read. In my early fifties and learning to LOVE myself, implicitly.

    Reply
    • Aletheia Luna says

      September 20, 2022 at 3:40 pm

      Beautiful โ™ก Thank you for expressing this Clara!

      Reply
  2. Haytam says

    September 19, 2022 at 7:34 pm

    Yes, true self-love, at least in my experience, is like daily investment in a project to get out of the galaxy even if I still hadn’t left my country’s borders.

    It requires very strong faith, not something that my mind would accept it easily. I believe that the process would be very long, but worth it.
    When I sit in a park or any public place and I try to relax, I can’t help noticing people who passes, and I instantly worry about other’s judgements. But it’s okay, I believe that I will meet the time when I stop caring about it.

    That’s how self-love works in me, I can’t stop self-criticism, self-pity, doubts, cowardice, but at least, I shall see how to meet those feeling when they come, it’s a pain to meet them, but they go anyway.

    Maybe one day, I will sit in a public place in peace without huge worry about other’s judgements, who knows, I can’t promise myself, but I have to believe in God.

    In fact, now, these late years, I notice a decay in my personality. I lost a huge amount of self-confidence. I lost the anger that drove me before to success. For instance, when I was 14 years old, the anger of not wanting to fail drove me to academic success. In society, the successful people (in usual norms usually) are driven by an anger and a strong desire to get their needs met. This ability is lost in me, so now I am being judged of being lazy, failure for a long time.
    I long for the days when I had that anger; Even if there is misery, but at least I was worthy of respect for my achievements. And now, there is misery without huge achievements.

    Yet, I accept that, because I believe that this is only a stage that is going to pass.

    Reply
    • Aletheia Luna says

      September 20, 2022 at 3:57 pm

      What you say here is so wise and true:

      “Thatโ€™s how self-love works in me, I canโ€™t stop self-criticism, self-pity, doubts, cowardice, but at least, I shall see how to meet those feeling when they come,”

      We can’t stop those thoughts (that’s like trying to stop the ocean and its waves!) but we can embrace what comes up and disidentify with it little by little.

      And when you talk about a “decay” in your personality, perhaps it’s not so much a decay as a release. You are released from those old tiring bonds of being driven to superficial success. Society may perceive that as a bad thing, but at a core level I feel there’s wisdom there. The Soul longs for something deeper, perhaps a new path. Only really you can say, but when I notice a loss in my drive (which has indeed happened through the years), I see it as a gift. I’m no longer wasting my energy writing about or focusing on things that don’t speak deeply to me, and instead being more conservative but deeply focused with my energy (because now I realize I have a limited amount!)

      Thanks for the food for thought Haytam, and for sharing your experience here โ™ก

      Reply
      • Haytam says

        September 20, 2022 at 4:20 pm

        Thanks for the feedback, truly!

        Reply
  3. John Ambrose says

    September 19, 2022 at 8:31 am

    The hardest part of learning how to love myself was and still is to just STOP. That is stop listening to the toxic inner voices of self conditioning, self destruction, inflated ego promoted from early life that drown you in self defensive self pity, sadness, squashed anger/shame, fears, where you feel you are the great unworthy that no one wants, with no future of personal expression, that nothing fits to the love you wish to express, but find frustration manipulation and set back. You finally get to the still point of “I cannot take this anymore” Like an addict in the initial stages self discovery, climbing out of the lowest point of their life, knowing all the pain, sorrow and karmic responses they have caused themselves and others, and now facing up to it all. Starting all over again to re-set their life, promising themselves and others, never to go back to old habits, desires and wanton self destructiveness. So this is the beginning of the long way back to self love and of course loving others in response as you heal the emotional wounds, straighten and correct outer responses that dominate, control or make others feel blame upset and unworthiness. Rekindle good mental inner responses and re find the happiness of balance in life that formulates love, light, peace, harmony and self truth.
    So in conclusion if like me it takes 50 years to do, re define self enough, to find the truth of acceptance warts and all, and to learn to re-trust yourself then your on the road of life as a self loved person. Knowing the wisdom of previous years that you are on a very important mission in life and most of all are Worthy of Love and Acceptance!

    Namaste :- Love to both of you and to all those needing more self love in their lives at this time of the great WOO WOO he he he!

    Reply
    • Aletheia Luna says

      September 20, 2022 at 3:52 pm

      Absolutely John. Learning to stop listening to those inner voices has been a *big* struggle for me too. One of the key things I’m learning and relearning (and forgetting and learning again) is the value of non-attachment: realizing that all these thoughts and voices aren’t actually me. They’re not true until I believe they are โ€“ in reality, they’re like mental farts in the wind. Haha, I’ll leave you with that fun analogy. Thank you for reading and sharing your experience :)

      Reply
  4. Courtney says

    September 19, 2022 at 5:42 am

    Beautiful! Thank you for this. I literally laughed out loud at your comment about wanting to punch your partner in the face ; sometimes that alternative perspective can be hard to swallow at first.

    Reply
    • Aletheia Luna says

      September 20, 2022 at 3:39 pm

      Oh yes, 110% hahaha

      Reply
  5. Brooke says

    September 19, 2022 at 4:16 am

    What a delightful read! I appreciate the way you give examples and knowledge based on your own personal experience. I can ingest and digest all of this information repeatedly and learn something new. Thank you for this truly exceptional gift to us.

    Reply
    • Aletheia Luna says

      September 20, 2022 at 3:39 pm

      I really appreciate reading this Brooke, thank you so much!

      Reply
  6. Roz says

    September 19, 2022 at 2:46 am

    If I may have a physical mailing address, I’d like to send a donation check made out to whom?

    Reply
    • Aletheia Luna says

      September 20, 2022 at 3:35 pm

      Wow, thanks so much Roz!
      Our address is:

      Aletheia & Mateo,
      PO BOX 3240,
      JOONDALUP,
      WA,
      6027,
      Australia

      You’re welcome to make the check out to “Luna & Sol PTY LTD”.

      Much love and gratitude to you Roz โ™ก

      Reply
  7. Marinela says

    September 19, 2022 at 2:01 am

    Thank you for this beautiful articleโค๏ธ I started to love myself 4 years ago, after working with great coaches and therapists who helped me. But, my self love and self respect were not welcomed by my family and some friends. I became happy and confident person, they wanted the other one, depressed and no-self respect person. Specially my close friend attacked me a lot, I was telling her my new ideas and what I think that I can do now, when si finally feel good in my own skin. She would attack everything I said. That took me back again, back to depression, to self doubt. So I went back to my coach and she helped me again. My old self would tell me that I’m weak for letting my friend and family take me down again, but my new self knows that the road is not straight. I don’t tell my new ideas to family and close friends, I am sharing them just with people who are on simmilar path.

    Reply
    • Roz says

      September 19, 2022 at 2:48 am

      Good for you. We don’t need to speak it w/them. Just be a proud model!

      Reply
    • nermin says

      September 20, 2022 at 6:04 am

      too familiar :) and the question is now then: do I need to live with that? and according to my answer, they all either be by my side or leave me alone (!) :-)

      Reply
    • Aletheia Luna says

      September 20, 2022 at 3:33 pm

      Well done Marinela โ™ก You deserve to be surrounded by people who support, respect, and uplift you. False friends are those that try to constantly bring you down due to their own negative and unresolved wounding. Keep on being true to you and finding those who love you for loving yourself!

      Reply
  8. Erik says

    July 13, 2022 at 8:07 pm

    I have long wrestled (and still do) with the concept of self-love!

    I tend to give an extreme example (purely hypothetical, mind): what if I beat up my wife on even days and molest my kids on odd days. Can I give myself these spiritual-self-help-affirmations such as: “You are perfect just as you are; you don’t need to change, there is nothing wrong with you, love yourself warts and all’?
    The wife and kids would not be thankful for this advice.
    Let’s make it less extreme. What if I weigh 400 pounds? Would it be smart to tell myself: “You don’t need to change, you are good enough, love your body as it is”? This would be lethal advice, for I risk dropping dead any moment.
    Even less extreme, but realistic. I have behavior patterns that demonstratively -by observable fact- cause harm to myself and others. If I totally accept these behavior patterns, then there is no need to change them and I will continu to bring harm to the world.
    Let’s dig a little deeper here.
    Another (hypothetical) example.
    Suppose I am severely addicted to hard drugs. I am not in denial. I know and understand that this addiction is real and that it is a part of me. Do I have to accept it, let alone love it? No! I have to get rid of it or I risk dying before my time!
    The motto of the spiritual self-help people is: “You are enough”. Do not struggle against an unwanted behavior in yourself because: “What you resist, persists”. OK then. I am enough, I will not resist this addictive behavior. Result: premature death by overdose or gradual destruction of my body. I HAVE to resist this addiction.
    I acknowledge that it is there, that it is part of me. I do not hate myself because I am an addict, I show compassion for me and my addiction, but the addiction itself has to go.
    So, Radical Acceptance, to quote a book title by Tara Brach, seems problematic. If I radically accept all of me, there is no impetus to change and then the addiction will kill me.

    Again, if you are worried after reading this, it is hypothetical. I am not addicted in any way, shape or form.

    Riddle me this?
    Erik

    Reply
    • Aletheia Luna says

      September 11, 2022 at 2:28 pm

      Hi Erik, thanks for your comment โ€“ and a fair analysis. If you read #6, I wrote (and also clarified) the importance of self-judgment:

      “Donโ€™t get me wrong. Self-judgment isnโ€™t always a bad thing. We need to be able to measure up our ability to achieve certain tasks at work, as well as understand our strengths and weakness to make smart choices. Not only that, but self-judgment can actually save our lives (e.g., deciding not to drive after judging that weโ€™re too drunk) and it also prevents us from being assholes if we need to change our behavior.”

      And:

      “However, as a side note, acceptance must be balanced with judgment. If weโ€™re physically abusive toward our partners, for example, we obviously donโ€™t want to โ€œacceptโ€ that behavior โ€“ that would be spiritual bypassing and a blatant misuse of this self-love concept. Serious judgment of our actions needs to be brought into the picture, particularly when weโ€™re being toxic or harmful toward others. In this case, judgment can actually be a form of self-love that prevents us from further hurting others, and therefore ourselves.”

      There’s a difference between blind/toxic self-love, which would result in making excuses for our abuse of others (as you point out), and healthy self-love, which has a side-hint of healthy self-analysis.

      As I’ve pointed out in this article, there *is* a dark side of self-love, and everything you’ve described above would fall into the category of a twisted and improper use of self-love. If we truly love ourselves, we would not harm others, because we realize how interconnected we are with them.

      I hope that makes sense. :)

      Reply
  9. Jimmy says

    June 22, 2022 at 12:08 pm

    This is a great beginning for me, you both are very talented. My question is having long term automatic thoughts about how we treat ourselves, is there a point that the subconscious patterns will never change? I understand neuroplasticity can give one hope in changing our beliefs, but sometimes I think there is something beneath the surface that eludes my awareness?

    Reply
    • Mateo Sol says

      June 22, 2022 at 3:06 pm

      Thanks Jimmy.

      From my experience, I think there are very few clinical conditions that could you say a person is unable to change, usually due to some mental illness that just makes it impossible for their minds to settle.

      What I do know is that our minds are really good at creating stories around things, especially when we all have access now to scientific information about things like ‘neuroplasticity’, it gives our mind content to anchor itself around, or attach itself and resist any change.

      One thing that can help us in this self-love work is finding a source of internal nourishment outside of our thoughts/concepts. The mind’s very nature is to try cut and divine our experience into understandable ideas, so connecting to the heart requires an alternative route.

      All the best.

      Reply
      • Jimmy says

        June 29, 2022 at 10:58 am

        Thank you! The scientific explanation resonates with me, it seems like ego and mind can get in the way of the truth.

        Reply
  10. Kabelo says

    April 25, 2022 at 1:13 am

    Self love is a journey that is very scary to start on my own,but your constant love and support by my side,I believe that I can do thisโค๏ธ

    Reply
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