Itโs difficult to believe that people who love and care about you wouldnโt be there for you when you need them the most, but as much as you donโt want to believe โ they did it for their own good.
The reality is that if you donโt love yourself, why should others? Learn why people will never have your back and how you can change that.
Hereโs Why People Will Never Have Your Back
It canโt happen without this first vital step.
A middle-aged stranger recently shared her story with me while we waited for the train. Itโs a genuinely sad tale of emotional abandonment: Her father died when she was young. Her mother remarried. The stepfather had two children of his own, and was indifferent to her.
This sad stranger grew up in the shadow of her stepbrothers and sisters. She was bullied at school, but too ashamed to tell anyone. Growing up, it seemed that no one, including her mother, paid much attention to her. She always felt like no one had her back.
Today, she has friends who constantly let her down. Her boss refuses to promote her despite her excellent performance. The city government, her landlord, and various organizations have abused their power and taken advantage of her, she says.
What was true in childhood is still true 40 years later: No one, she says, has her back.
Related: How You Can Love Yourself Unconditionally
How We Let Ourselves Down
Itโs easy to identify the people who let us down. Itโs much harder to notice when we arenโt there for ourselves. Here is a partial list of ways that we abandon ourselves:
6 Signs You Have Let Yourself Down
- Judging ourselves harshly.
- Refusing to take care of our physical and mental health.
- Allowing others to violate our personal boundaries.
- Ignoring or suppressing our true feelings.
- Assuming weโre wrong when others disagree.
- Failing to defend ourselves against unwarranted criticism.
Related: Are You Emotionally Abusing Yourself? 8 Ways To Stop
Be the Change You Wish To See
Other people are likely to do whatever they wantโor refuse to do what we want them to doโif we fail to have our own back.
Someone needs to step forward and protect us from injury, large or small. As adults, it starts with us: If you constantly let yourself down in the ways noted above, others will also let you down. Why should anyone be there for you if youโre not there for yourself?
Parents should look out for their children. Unfortunately that doesnโt always happen, and some children, like the woman I met at the train station, are left to fend for themselves. Once a child grows up, however, it becomes her responsibility to look out for herself. This is true whether or not someone had her back in childhood. But some people refuse to be there for themselves because theyโre still waiting for someone else to be there for them.
Does taking care of yourself make you feel like youโre giving up on others? It shouldnโt. The better equipped you are to look after yourself, the more you can expect, and allow, others to have your back.
Let Go of The Familiar
The woman at the train station was probably (and understandably) ambivalent about being cared for and supported. On the one hand, itโs what she wanted and needed. But itโs also scary to let someone be there for you when no one ever has. Feeling let down may be painful, but at least itโs familiar: No one can disappoint you if you assume theyโre not going to be there for you.
If you share this dilemmaโalways feeling let down but unsure whether you can let people be there for youโstart by inviting the safest possible person to support you: yourself.
Review the ways you might be letting yourself down, and work on reversing them. Taking care of yourself will show others youโre worth taking care ofโbecause you are.
Related: 10 Reminders When You Feel Youโre Never Going To Be Enough
Itโs difficult enough to be disappointed by others, but letting yourself down can be incredibly damaging. It develops self-doubt and can make you feel like youโve failed. Practice positive affirmations and avoid negative self-talk each day!
What to do when letting yourself down?
When you feel let down, start by supporting yourself. Taking care of your needs will show others youโre worth taking care of.
How do we abandon ourselves?
We abandon ourselves in many ways like judging ourselves harshly, refusing to take care of our physical and mental health, allowing others to violate our personal boundaries, ignoring or suppressing our true feelings, assuming weโre wrong when others disagree, or failing to defend ourselves against unwarranted criticism.
Written by: Tina Gilbertson LPC Originally appeared on: Psychology Today Republished with permission
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