8 Steps to Making Peace With Your Past Self

Author : Dr. Jim Taylor

Making Peace With Your Past Self: 8 Ways To Achieve This

Making peace with your past self is one of the most powerful steps toward emotional freedom and self-growth. Itโ€™s about learning how to let go of your past, forgive your mistakes, and stop letting old wounds define who you are today.

Through healing your inner child and moving on from past mistakes, you open space for self-acceptance, peace, and a more fulfilling present.

KEY POINTS

  • A person’s past can direct what they think, what they feel, how they behave, and how they interact.
  • The influence of one’s past self can often be unhealthy for one’s present self.
  • Empathy, embracing humanity, forgiveness, and acceptance can help people make peace with their past selves.
  • Taking ownership, making amends, being the best version of ourselves, and living our best life are our future.

At one level, Iโ€™m always amazed at how so many of us allow our past selves to have such a big impact on who we are now and how we think, feel, and engage with our world in adulthood.

At another level, Iโ€™m not the least bit surprised because our childhood experiences that shape our early selves are met by such inexperienced and naรฏve versions of ourselves.

When we are young, we are unable to put those experiences in the context of our lives and manage the strong and unfamiliar emotions we feel.

We lack the pre-frontal cortex development that would enable us to create understanding and perspective, allowing us to manage those early life experiences more effectively.

It is not uncommon for me to hear people discuss their early selves using words like hate, blame, guilt, shame, embarrassment, and revulsion, even decades later.

Related: 20 Signs Itโ€™s Time To Let Go Of The Past And Move On

They still carry the burden of their childhoods on their shoulders and in their hearts, even though they are vastly different people now, infused with experience, insights, and perspectives that you might think would enable them to separate themselves from those less developed iterations of themselves.

And, most painfully, because many people havenโ€™t made peace with their former selves, this inability to live their adult lives based on who they are rather than who they were interferes with many aspects of their current lives including their happiness, personal growth, goal attainment, and relationships.

Given these challenges, the $64,000 question is: How do you make peace with your past self so you can live a life of meaning, satisfaction, and joy with the latest version of you?

In my professional and personal journeys, I have discovered eight steps you can take to find that equanimity with your earlier self that is required for you to feel that same way with your present self.

8 Steps to Making Peace With Your Past Self and Moving On With Grace

1. Empathy

Empathy is where your journey to peace with your past self must begin. Without being able to feel what the younger you felt, you wonโ€™t be able to accept, much less embrace or provide succor to, that earlier version of yourself.

Whatever you did or think you did when you were young, you must understand that you didnโ€™t choose to be that way.

Instead, you were a victim of your culture (e.g., family, peer, popular, societal) and just trying to survive what was, in your limited life experience, an overwhelming situation.

Looking at your past self through the lens of empathy will hopefully elicit a response of โ€œI really see and understand you now.โ€

It can also evoke feelings of concern, caring, and compassion that will draw your earlier self toward you instead of other feelings of anger and hurt that have caused you to repel that younger you.

Making peace with your past self

2. Embrace Your Humanity

A key aspect of what has kept you from making peace with your past self is that you felt ashamed for who you saw, a flawed being not worthy of love or respect.

Yet, it is those very qualities that you came to revile that, in fact, make you so worthy of both because those imperfections are what make us human.

When you embrace your humanity, you accept that you donโ€™t always act in admirable ways, particularly when you are young and are driven more by your unconscious urges than conscious choices.

This acceptance of all aspects of your humanityโ€”the sublime, the mundane, and, yes, even the unprincipledโ€”relieves you of the low (and unfair) opinion you hold of yourself and, in a sense, absolves you of your perceived sins (used in the secular sense of the word).

In doing so, you remove the painful emotions I described above that you have felt for your past self for so many years.

I use the word โ€œembraceโ€ deliberately because, after perhaps decades of distancing yourself from your past self, giving that earlier you the cold shoulder for being the awful person you believed yourself to be (which only added insult to injury), you can now give your younger self the literal and metaphorical embrace you have yearned for for so long and, along with it, the love you craved then and have craved ever since.

3. Forgiveness

From the first two steps, empathy and embracing your humanity, you can now forgive yourself for the perceived transgressions of your youth.

You werenโ€™t a bad person by birth or upbringing. You didnโ€™t choose or intend to do bad things. Instead, you were vulnerable, impressionable, in need, and knew no other way to act.

As I said above, you were a victim and just trying to manage an untenable situation. Your younger self deserves to be forgiven. And, perhaps even more, so does your current self for carrying the weight of your former self on your shoulders for so long.

Related: 10 Tips To Let Go Of Your Painful Past

4. Acceptance

With empathy, embracing your humanity, and forgiveness comes acceptance. You were who you were, you did what you did, and there is nothing you can do to rewrite the past.

You have likely suffered sufficiently for your wrongs with perhaps daily self-flagellations and certainly a particularly painful kind of long psychic imprisonment.

Accept your past self and then move on. Itโ€™s time to grant your past self-parole because, just by being on this journey, you are demonstrating that you have been rehabilitated.

Though you canโ€™t change the past, you can create a future that can help you atone for that past.

5. Ownership

The four previous steps donโ€™t free you of responsibility for your actions when you were young. You may have acted badly and hurt others. You do not get a โ€œget out of jail freeโ€ card just for forgiving and accepting yourself.

That might make you feel better, but it doesnโ€™t reverse the harm you may have inflicted on others.

To make peace with your past self, you must take what may be the most uncomfortable course of action, namely, to own what you did and take full responsibility for your early behavior (โ€œI did that, I was wrong, and I am so sorryโ€).

That willingness to own your past shows tremendous strength and bodes well for owning your future.

6. Make Amends

Wouldnโ€™t it be wonderful to be able to go back in time and correct everything you did that you regretted? Unfortunately, you donโ€™t have that transtemporal capability, at least not for going back in time.

But you do have that seemingly magical capacity to go forward in time, and that is where you can make amends. Until you develop the ability to travel back in time, the future is the only place to redeem yourself with good deeds.

7. Be the Best Version of Yourself

Another aspect of your ability to alter the future is to make intentional choices to not be the person you once were and to be the person you wish you had been in the past.

Who do you want to be? What values do you wish to live by? What attitudes and beliefs do you want to guide your life? And, ultimately, what impact do you want to have on your world?

From these deliberations, you will identify and can then strive to be the best version of yourself.

Making peace with your past self

8. Live Your Best Life

When you make peace with your earlier self, you remove the weight of your past from your shoulders and are liberated to live your best life. What does โ€œbest lifeโ€ mean? That is a question that is deeply personal, and only you can answer.

Defining and operationalizing your โ€œbest lifeโ€ can come from profound explorations of what meaning and purpose you attach to life, what values you prioritize, what your aspirations are, what you find fulfilling, and what brings you joy and contentment.

Related: 30+ Inspiring Quotes About Forgiveness To Let Go Of The Painful Past

Once you answer these deep questions, you will have a clear path toward who you want to be and what you want to do in the present and into the future.

And when you continue your journey with those questions answered, you truly leave your past behind you and can chart a course toward a remarkable future.

Want to know more about how to let go of your past and work towards healing your inner child? Check this video out below!

Making peace with your past self and moving on from past mistakes

Written By Jim Taylor Ph.D.
Originally Appeared On Psychology Today
how to let go of your past

Published On:

Last updated on:

Dr. Jim Taylor

Jim Taylor, Ph.D., Psychology is an internationally recognized authority on the psychology of performance, parenting, technology, and popular culture. Dr. Taylor has also worked extensively in the corporate world providing individual and group training to executives and businesses throughout North and South America, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. He has published more than 1000 articles in scholarly and popular publications and is the author of 18 books, and the editor of 5 textbooks. Dr. Taylor blogs on sports, personal development, psychology, parenting, education, technology, and popular culture on his website. His posts are aggregated by dozens of websites worldwide and have been read by more than 15 million people. Dr. Taylor is also the co-founder and Chief Content Officer for Mindto, an app that empowers athlete performance, well-being, and mental health. To learn more, please visit drjimtaylor.com and mindto.io.

Disclaimer: The informational content on The Minds Journal have been created and reviewed by qualified mental health professionals. They are intended solely for educational and self-awareness purposes and should not be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are experiencing emotional distress or have concerns about your mental health, please seek help from a licensed mental health professional or healthcare provider.

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Making Peace With Your Past Self: 8 Ways To Achieve This

Making peace with your past self is one of the most powerful steps toward emotional freedom and self-growth. Itโ€™s about learning how to let go of your past, forgive your mistakes, and stop letting old wounds define who you are today.

Through healing your inner child and moving on from past mistakes, you open space for self-acceptance, peace, and a more fulfilling present.

KEY POINTS

  • A person’s past can direct what they think, what they feel, how they behave, and how they interact.
  • The influence of one’s past self can often be unhealthy for one’s present self.
  • Empathy, embracing humanity, forgiveness, and acceptance can help people make peace with their past selves.
  • Taking ownership, making amends, being the best version of ourselves, and living our best life are our future.

At one level, Iโ€™m always amazed at how so many of us allow our past selves to have such a big impact on who we are now and how we think, feel, and engage with our world in adulthood.

At another level, Iโ€™m not the least bit surprised because our childhood experiences that shape our early selves are met by such inexperienced and naรฏve versions of ourselves.

When we are young, we are unable to put those experiences in the context of our lives and manage the strong and unfamiliar emotions we feel.

We lack the pre-frontal cortex development that would enable us to create understanding and perspective, allowing us to manage those early life experiences more effectively.

It is not uncommon for me to hear people discuss their early selves using words like hate, blame, guilt, shame, embarrassment, and revulsion, even decades later.

Related: 20 Signs Itโ€™s Time To Let Go Of The Past And Move On

They still carry the burden of their childhoods on their shoulders and in their hearts, even though they are vastly different people now, infused with experience, insights, and perspectives that you might think would enable them to separate themselves from those less developed iterations of themselves.

And, most painfully, because many people havenโ€™t made peace with their former selves, this inability to live their adult lives based on who they are rather than who they were interferes with many aspects of their current lives including their happiness, personal growth, goal attainment, and relationships.

Given these challenges, the $64,000 question is: How do you make peace with your past self so you can live a life of meaning, satisfaction, and joy with the latest version of you?

In my professional and personal journeys, I have discovered eight steps you can take to find that equanimity with your earlier self that is required for you to feel that same way with your present self.

8 Steps to Making Peace With Your Past Self and Moving On With Grace

1. Empathy

Empathy is where your journey to peace with your past self must begin. Without being able to feel what the younger you felt, you wonโ€™t be able to accept, much less embrace or provide succor to, that earlier version of yourself.

Whatever you did or think you did when you were young, you must understand that you didnโ€™t choose to be that way.

Instead, you were a victim of your culture (e.g., family, peer, popular, societal) and just trying to survive what was, in your limited life experience, an overwhelming situation.

Looking at your past self through the lens of empathy will hopefully elicit a response of โ€œI really see and understand you now.โ€

It can also evoke feelings of concern, caring, and compassion that will draw your earlier self toward you instead of other feelings of anger and hurt that have caused you to repel that younger you.

Making peace with your past self

2. Embrace Your Humanity

A key aspect of what has kept you from making peace with your past self is that you felt ashamed for who you saw, a flawed being not worthy of love or respect.

Yet, it is those very qualities that you came to revile that, in fact, make you so worthy of both because those imperfections are what make us human.

When you embrace your humanity, you accept that you donโ€™t always act in admirable ways, particularly when you are young and are driven more by your unconscious urges than conscious choices.

This acceptance of all aspects of your humanityโ€”the sublime, the mundane, and, yes, even the unprincipledโ€”relieves you of the low (and unfair) opinion you hold of yourself and, in a sense, absolves you of your perceived sins (used in the secular sense of the word).

In doing so, you remove the painful emotions I described above that you have felt for your past self for so many years.

I use the word โ€œembraceโ€ deliberately because, after perhaps decades of distancing yourself from your past self, giving that earlier you the cold shoulder for being the awful person you believed yourself to be (which only added insult to injury), you can now give your younger self the literal and metaphorical embrace you have yearned for for so long and, along with it, the love you craved then and have craved ever since.

3. Forgiveness

From the first two steps, empathy and embracing your humanity, you can now forgive yourself for the perceived transgressions of your youth.

You werenโ€™t a bad person by birth or upbringing. You didnโ€™t choose or intend to do bad things. Instead, you were vulnerable, impressionable, in need, and knew no other way to act.

As I said above, you were a victim and just trying to manage an untenable situation. Your younger self deserves to be forgiven. And, perhaps even more, so does your current self for carrying the weight of your former self on your shoulders for so long.

Related: 10 Tips To Let Go Of Your Painful Past

4. Acceptance

With empathy, embracing your humanity, and forgiveness comes acceptance. You were who you were, you did what you did, and there is nothing you can do to rewrite the past.

You have likely suffered sufficiently for your wrongs with perhaps daily self-flagellations and certainly a particularly painful kind of long psychic imprisonment.

Accept your past self and then move on. Itโ€™s time to grant your past self-parole because, just by being on this journey, you are demonstrating that you have been rehabilitated.

Though you canโ€™t change the past, you can create a future that can help you atone for that past.

5. Ownership

The four previous steps donโ€™t free you of responsibility for your actions when you were young. You may have acted badly and hurt others. You do not get a โ€œget out of jail freeโ€ card just for forgiving and accepting yourself.

That might make you feel better, but it doesnโ€™t reverse the harm you may have inflicted on others.

To make peace with your past self, you must take what may be the most uncomfortable course of action, namely, to own what you did and take full responsibility for your early behavior (โ€œI did that, I was wrong, and I am so sorryโ€).

That willingness to own your past shows tremendous strength and bodes well for owning your future.

6. Make Amends

Wouldnโ€™t it be wonderful to be able to go back in time and correct everything you did that you regretted? Unfortunately, you donโ€™t have that transtemporal capability, at least not for going back in time.

But you do have that seemingly magical capacity to go forward in time, and that is where you can make amends. Until you develop the ability to travel back in time, the future is the only place to redeem yourself with good deeds.

7. Be the Best Version of Yourself

Another aspect of your ability to alter the future is to make intentional choices to not be the person you once were and to be the person you wish you had been in the past.

Who do you want to be? What values do you wish to live by? What attitudes and beliefs do you want to guide your life? And, ultimately, what impact do you want to have on your world?

From these deliberations, you will identify and can then strive to be the best version of yourself.

Making peace with your past self

8. Live Your Best Life

When you make peace with your earlier self, you remove the weight of your past from your shoulders and are liberated to live your best life. What does โ€œbest lifeโ€ mean? That is a question that is deeply personal, and only you can answer.

Defining and operationalizing your โ€œbest lifeโ€ can come from profound explorations of what meaning and purpose you attach to life, what values you prioritize, what your aspirations are, what you find fulfilling, and what brings you joy and contentment.

Related: 30+ Inspiring Quotes About Forgiveness To Let Go Of The Painful Past

Once you answer these deep questions, you will have a clear path toward who you want to be and what you want to do in the present and into the future.

And when you continue your journey with those questions answered, you truly leave your past behind you and can chart a course toward a remarkable future.

Want to know more about how to let go of your past and work towards healing your inner child? Check this video out below!

Making peace with your past self and moving on from past mistakes

Written By Jim Taylor Ph.D.
Originally Appeared On Psychology Today
how to let go of your past

Published On:

Last updated on:

Dr. Jim Taylor

Jim Taylor, Ph.D., Psychology is an internationally recognized authority on the psychology of performance, parenting, technology, and popular culture. Dr. Taylor has also worked extensively in the corporate world providing individual and group training to executives and businesses throughout North and South America, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. He has published more than 1000 articles in scholarly and popular publications and is the author of 18 books, and the editor of 5 textbooks. Dr. Taylor blogs on sports, personal development, psychology, parenting, education, technology, and popular culture on his website. His posts are aggregated by dozens of websites worldwide and have been read by more than 15 million people. Dr. Taylor is also the co-founder and Chief Content Officer for Mindto, an app that empowers athlete performance, well-being, and mental health. To learn more, please visit drjimtaylor.com and mindto.io.

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