Posted on

Self Love Sunday: What labels are you wearing & how to increase your self worth

It’s Self Love Sunday. So, grab your favorite beverage, and let’s talk about self-worth … what it is, what the research says about it and how to increase it.

Do you have a question about life that you want Senée to answer? Leave it in the comments or email it to PrincessGuide@BecomingPublishing.com. If you’d like to go deeper and learn more about healthy self-love, get a copy of Senée ‘s book The Princess Guide to Loving Yourself First.

Senée Seale is a book author, mental health professional and life guide passionate about helping people create positive changes in their lives. Are you ready to start attracting positive things into your life through practicing daily affirmations? Get your free copy of The Princes Guide to Gratitude Affirmations. If you’d like to book a personal session with Senée, she’s accepting new clients.

Posted on

Self Love Sunday: What is self-love and what self-love is not

On this Self Love Sunday episode, we’re talking all about what self-love is and what it is not. Watch to the end because I have a special exercise for you to do! I want to know what you’re learning about self-love and how you are implementing these things into your life. So, leave a comment here!

Do you have a question about life that you want Senée to answer? Leave it in the comments or email it to PrincessGuide@BecomingPublishing.com. If you’d like to go deeper and learn more about healthy self-love, get a copy of Senée ‘s book The Princess Guide to Loving Yourself First.

Senée Seale is a book author, mental health professional and life guide passionate about helping people create positive changes in their lives. Are you ready to start attracting positive things into your life through practicing daily affirmations? Get your free copy of The Princes Guide to Gratitude Affirmations. If you’d like to schedule a personal session with Senée, she’s accepting new clients.

Posted on

Self Love Sunday: Who are you?

How easy is it for you to answer the question, “Who are you?” We’re in my kitchen today chatting about life. I’ll take you through a short exercise to discover if you have any areas you may want to work on. So, grab a cup of tea (or the beverage of your choice), click the video and let’s talk about self-worth and who you really are.

Do you have a question about life that you want Senée to answer? Leave it in the comments or email it to PrincessGuide@BecomingPublishing.com. If you’d like to go deeper and learn more about healthy self-love, get a copy of Senée ‘s book The Princess Guide to Loving Yourself First.

Senée Seale is a book author, mental health professional and life guide passionate about helping people create positive changes in their lives. Are you ready to start attracting positive things into your life through practicing daily affirmations? Get your free copy of The Princes Guide to Gratitude Affirmations. If you’d like to work directly with Senée, she’s accepting new clients.

Posted on

How to love and honor yourself

It’s the week leading up to my birthday and always a time of great reflection for me. We all know that 2020 has been a rough year for all of us — in one way or another — but it has been a year of great joy and fulfillment for me, personally. I’m so grateful for things that have happened this year that have caused me to grow and brought me great joy. One of those things was releasing my latest book The Princess Guide to Loving Yourself First. That book literally changed my life because I practice everything I write about … It’s the only way I can live with myself knowing that I’m practicing the two qualities I value most — authenticity and integrity.

In 2018, I was working in a very stressful environment, and my daily theme song was Love by The Sundays. “Love, love, love. Just love yourself like no one else. Love. It’s enough. And they can say what they like, but they still can’t take your love.” I heard the words every day, but they really didn’t sink in until I started doing the research for the book.

Senee Seale The Princess Guide

People who are in service to self will tell you that loving yourself is selfish. That it’s wrong. Why? They want you to put their wants and needs ahead of your own to aid in their service to themselves. However, I firmly believe that loving yourself (in a healthy way) is the firm foundation needed for every relationship you have in life. When you love and value yourself, you will make decisions out of a place of empowerment and an abundance of love that will be for your highest good. These decisions will also positively impact others around you even if they don’t result in the outcome they want.

As I talk about in The Princess Guide to Loving Yourself First, when speaking about self-love — also referred to in psychological circles as self-compassion — researchers are finding it is not only the key to positive mental health, but also the key to life. “Though the term ‘self-compassion’ may sound like self-indulgence or may feel like a weakness, it is actually the secret to resilience, strength in the face of failure, the ability to learn from mistakes and to bounce back with greater enthusiasm,” wrote Dr. Emma Seppala. “Self-compassion involves treating oneself as one would a friend, being more mindful and understanding our situation in the context of a larger human experience. When we can be more understanding and gentler with ourselves, identify less with the emotions that surround our mistakes and understand that failure is a normal part of the larger human experience, we become stronger and more successful in the long run … the state of your life depends on the state of your mind. So, be kind to yourself.”

I believe it’s important to honor yourself every, single day — not just on your birthday, once a year. Wordnik defines honor as, “High respect, as that shown for special merit; recognition or esteem. Great privilege.” When we practice loving and honoring ourselves, we build our self-confidence and begin acting from a place of empowerment and not lack. We learn to go to the kingdom within us to find the answers for ourselves, and we also learn how to honor others around us.

I’ve had to learn not to let anyone take my crown and lure me off my throne — meaning: I have to do what is best for me and not allow others to mistreat me whether it be in friendship relationships, work relationships or romantic relationships. Most wedding vows will have each person promise to “love, honor and cherish” their spouse, but how can you promise such a thing if you haven’t even practiced it on yourself first?

If you’ve never known how to practice honoring yourself or want to learn new techniques, Dr. Margaret Paul, a relationship expert, gave The Huffington Post these suggestions in 2015 that still ring true today:

1. Listen within to your own feelings. Many people easily tune into others’ feelings yet have no idea what they feel. If you ignore a child’s feelings, that child will feel unloved. Ignoring your own feelings has the same result — your inner child feels rejected, abandoned and unloved by you.

2. Be compassionate with your feelings. If you judge your feelings, telling yourself you are wrong for having them, your inner child will feel rejected and abandoned by you. If you are kind, gentle, tender, understanding and accepting of your feelings, your inner child will feel loved by you.

3. Be open to learning about what your feelings are telling you. Just as an actual child feels loved when you are compassionately interested in why he or she is hurting, your inner child will feel loved when you explore what your feelings are telling you. All feelings are informational. Just as physical pain alerts you to a problem that needs attention, so does emotional pain. Painful feelings are telling you that you are abandoning yourself, that someone is being unloving to you — or to themselves or to others — or that a situation is not good for you. Compassionately attending to your feelings, learning what they are telling you and then taking action to remedy the situation will make you feel loved.

4. Create a solid connection with a spiritual source of love, wisdom and comfort. Love is not a feeling we generate from our mind. It comes from the heart when our heart is open to our source of love. When you open to learning with your higher power about loving yourself and others, love flows into your heart and you feel loved.

5. Choose to be around loving people. We don’t always have a choice — such as in work relationships — but when we do have a choice — such as in personal relationships — choosing to be around caring, supportive and accepting people will make you feel loved. If, when you have a choice, you consistently engage with unkind, judgmental or abusive people, the message you are sending to yourself is that you are not worth loving.

6. Take loving actions for yourself around others. When you are around someone who is being unkind, speak up for yourself letting the person know that you don’t like being treated that way. Then, either be open to learning about what is going on [with the other person], or lovingly disengage from the interaction. Allowing others to treat you badly sends a message to your inner child that he or she is not worth loving.

7. Take care of your body, your time, your space and your finances. You will feel loved and lovable when you feed yourself healthy food and get exercise and sleep. When you ignore your health, you are giving yourself the message that you are not worth loving. When you respect your own and others’ time and space, you are letting yourself know that you are worth it. When you overspend, putting yourself in unnecessary debt, you are not taking loving care of yourself, and your inner child will feel scared, alone and unloved. Just as an actual child needs to feel safe regarding the necessities of life, your inner child needs to feel the same way.

8. Find work you love. Since work takes up a big part of your day, finding or creating work that fulfills you is vitally important. If you continue to force yourself to stay at jobs you hate, the message to yourself is that you are not worth doing whatever it is you need to do to create a fulfilling work life.

9. Create balance. We need balance in our life to feel loved and lovable. We need time to work and time to rest and rejuvenate. We also need time to nurture our body and soul through activities that bring us joy.

Loving yourself and practicing these loving actions will not only help you get healthy self-esteem that no one can take away from you, but it will also give you the skills you need to love others when the right relationship comes into your life.

Senée Seale is a book author, mental health professional and life guide passionate about helping people create positive changes in their lives and relationships. Are you ready to start attracting positive things into your life through practicing daily affirmations? Get your free copy of The Princes Guide to Gratitude Affirmations.

Posted on

Now available: The Princess Guide to Loving Yourself First

I’ve been talking about it for months, and now it’s finally here! The Princess Guide to Loving Yourself First is now available in eBook and paperback formats (hardback coming soon) through Amazon.com, ThePrincessGuide.com and online booksellers.

Senee Seale The Princess Guide

While all my books have a special place in my heart, I’m really excited about The Princess Guide to Loving Yourself First because it has been a game changer in my own life, and I know it can be in every reader’s life, as well! I always do everything I write about (authenticity and integrity mean everything to me), but the change in my confidence and attitude is so off the charts that I’m noticing the change — in addition to others pointing it out … And it’s a really good thing!

Are you looking for a way to strengthen the relationships you have in your life? Would you like to learn how to love yourself more and increase your self-confidence? Loving yourself is the most important key to happiness in life and relationships. This book will help you break out of the programming that tells you that other people’s love and acceptance is more important than your own. Changing your thinking about self-love will give you freedom and the fortitude to no longer allow others to control you by making you preform to their desired wishes through the threats of taking their love away. When your source of love comes from within, you are no longer needy for the love of others, and you can have more accurate judgment on whom you allow into your life. I will guide you through this process so that you can not only love yourself in a healthy way, but so that you can also more adequately love others. Putting self-love into action is a game changer and will transform your life and relationships.

I’m also offering a 12-week Loving Yourself First coaching package where I work one-on-one guiding clients through the process. To celebrate the release of the book, that coaching package is being offered at 50 percent off for a limited time.

Everyone who purchases the book can be entered into a drawing to get a free 30-minute coaching/counseling session with me. Drawings will take place on July 12 & 26, 2020. To enter, simply take a photo of yourself with the cover of the paperback or eBook, post to social media and tag me (Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn: @SeneeSeale; Facebook: @ThePrincessGuide), or email a copy of your receipt to PrincessGuide@BecomingPublishing.com.

Senée Seale is a book author, mental health professional and life guide passionate about helping people create positive changes in their lives and relationships. Are you ready to start attracting positive things into your life through practicing daily affirmations? Get your free copy of The Princes Guide to Gratitude Affirmations. For more information on how to have successful relationships and peace of mind, check out the website today!

Posted on 1 Comment

Summer romances can last a lifetime

As the Summer winds down, many of you have fallen in love and had the time of your lives. I haven’t had a Summer romance in seven years, but I’ve had a couple of encounters this Summer that have reinforced my primary love affair.

I went on vacation early in the Summer to visit my best friend in Los Angeles. It was surprisingly cold there, and my plans to spend the week on the beach were interrupted. My cute wardrobe also had to be altered — meaning it was so cold I had to wear the only warm thing I brought with me which was a black zip-up hoodie.

We decided to go to dinner one night after my best friend got off work. I was wearing printed leggings, a sleeveless top and the hoodie with my hair in a ponytail. I was dressed fine for dinner, but I didn’t know we would be going out afterward.

Not caring, I stepped out of the Uber. Before I could take two steps onto the sidewalk, a cute guy (I thought he looked like a young Joaquin Phoenix, but my best friend said he looked like a young Tom Cruise) came running toward me yelling, “Oh, my God! Oh, my God!”

I was thinking, “What have I done now? I literally just stepped out of the Uber and onto the sidewalk … I couldn’t have done anything yet!”

When he got right in front of me, he said, “Oh, my God! I saw your eyes half a block away! You are so beautiful!”

I smiled and said, “Thank you so much! That’s so nice of you to say!”

He went on to ask me my name, and when I told him he said, “Oh, my God! You’re beautiful and have a pretty name!”

It reminded me of Deuteronomy 28:2 (CSB), “All these blessings will come and overtake you” — basically chase you down and shower you will blessings, or compliments in this case.

We didn’t get to talk much because a girl in his group pulled him and his friend away. When I told my best friend that we didn’t even know his name she said, “Oh, yes we do! It’s Oh, my God! Oh, my God!” (She’s a former actress and reenacts the story so much better than I do.)

Just a week ago, I was having dinner alone in a restaurant. I was enjoying my salad and absorbed with solving the problems of my kingdom inside my head. With a mouth full of salad, I heard a voice say, “Excuse me.” I looked up to see an athletic guy standing at my table. He said, “In case no one has told you today, you look very beautiful!” Covering my full mouth, I mumbled, “Thank you!”

Once again, I was not dressed up or looking my absolute best, at all — I had just spent the day taking care of some projects at home and was on my way to the grocery store after I fed myself. I did not feel beautiful in any way, but I needed to be reminded of my true nature.

When you have healthy self-love/self-esteem, you don’t need outside validation. However, it’s always nice and makes you feel good. Especially so, when those kind words of affirmation come from someone you truly love.

If you’re in a marriage or committed relationship, it’s always a good idea to let your loved one know how much you care for them. Like they say, flowers are meant to be enjoyed by the living, not the dead — meaning don’t wait until someone dies to send them flowers or tell them how much they mean to you.

Whether you’re in a relationship or alone, it’s important to show that love and admiration to yourself. I look in the mirror every day and tell myself that I’m beautiful — inside and out. I show gratitude for all the things I have internally and externally.

Seeking validation from outside ourselves is dangerous. I’ve learned this truth the hard way.

Melody Beattie explains it in her book The Language of Letting Go:

Most of us want the approval of others … In order to live happily, to live consistently with the way our Higher Power wants us to live, and to tap into a way of life that is in harmony with the universe, we need to let go of our extreme need for approval. These unmet needs for approval and love from our past give others control over us today. These needs can prevent us from acting in our best interest and being true to ourselves. We can approve of ourselves. In the end, that’s the only approval that counts.

It’s been my experience that when I truly practice self-love, the validation I get from others is nice and very much appreciated. However, I don’t go chasing after it or doing things to get attention because I already have it from myself.

How are you keeping your Summer romance alive for the rest of the year?

Catch these first-run Write About It Wednesday blogs every Wednesday. For more information on how to have successful relationships and peace of mind, check out the bookstore today!

Posted on

Learning to love yourself first

Loving yourself is, in my personal and professional opinion, the most important key to happiness in life and relationships. I know what it’s like to have people in your life tell you through their words and actions that you have no worth and are not lovable. But I also know what it’s like to break out of that programming and no longer allow them to control your thinking and life …

Let me say this upfront—There is nothing wrong with wanting to be loved. I believe we were created to love and be loved. The problem occurs when we give that power of love to another person outside of ourselves—when the love from another person is more important than how we feel about and love ourselves. If given to the wrong people, they can and will use it to control, dominate, and hurt us. I’ve seen it time and time again and experienced it personally.

The answer to this problem is to love yourself first. That way, no one can take love away from you when the main source of it comes from within yourself. A few months after publishing The Princess Guide to Healing a Broken Heart where I devoted a chapter to this topic, I read Christian Mickelsen’s book Abundance Unleashed where he seems to share my opinion.

“The more attachments you have to being loved, the more neediness, the more you’re going to be searching for that love out in the world, and it’s always going to be elusive,” he wrote.

When you’ve had your heart broken—especially if it’s happened more than once or the situation was very traumatic—it’s easy to blame yourself and let the other person off the hook. While I don’t want you to plot revenge nor look for ways to get even, I do want you to give credit where credit is due and place responsibility where responsibility is due. If you are the person responsible for the demise of the relationship, then you need to own it, repent, and change your behavior.

If you’re anything like me, you wouldn’t go anywhere in the vicinity of a snake, even if it’s behind a glass wall. So, why do we end up letting them (in human form) into our precious lives and sacred beds? Because they come disguised as handsome men or beautiful women promising us everything of which we’ve ever dreamed. By the time we realize they’re actually snakes, it’s too late—we’re already head-over-heels in love and/or engaged.

When someone leaves you—a severe form of rejection, in my personal and professional opinion—you’re put in a tough spot. It feels more like being stuck than anything else because the love you have for that person—if it’s genuine love—doesn’t go away just because he or she did. If you’re a person of faith you believe in the impossible, no matter how “crazy” it may seem or feel. (NOTE: It’s been drilled into me from graduate school studying psychotherapy that “crazy” isn’t a clinical term, but it can be a genuine feeling nonetheless.) But you’re still left all alone—waiting for love to come back to you either from the person who left or someone new. I’m just going to say what you’re not supposed to say—What about YOU? What do you do during the in-between time?

I would dare to suggest that you take all that love, concern, and obsession you’ve freely given to the other person and give it all back to yourself. “We often forget that the ultimate source of love is within us,” Mickelsen wrote. “The more love you feel for yourself, the more other people will naturally love you and gravitate toward you.”

Now, let me be very clear—I am in no way talking about nor condoning the self-love that researchers have found leads to inflated egos and Narcissism. What I am suggesting is learning to love and nurture yourself in a way that uplifts your emotional state and increases your confidence which, in turn, will increase your confidence in all areas of your life and project a positive frequency to the outside world.

It’s incredible how we can often desperately want love and acceptance from the very people who have hurt us the most. Albert Einstein said, “We can’t solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.” I will go further to say that the person who hurt you cannot heal you—only you (through the help and power of God) can heal you!

If someone hurt you, they need Jesus and obviously don’t know Him and aren’t following Him—“Where the Spirit of the Lord is present, there is freedom” (2 Corinthians 3:17). Freedom cannot exist when confusion, torment, hurt, and pain are dominant. We must forgive them and focus on getting healing and wholeness for ourselves while letting God do whatever He wants to do in the life of the other person. We don’t get to decide if they will straighten up and treat us right, but we can let go of our obsession of them and focus on loving and appreciating ourselves.

As defined by the clinical term of Dependency—aka Co-dependency or Self Love Deficit Disorder—some people are afraid to be alone because that means they have to be responsible for their own financial, physical, and spiritual wellbeing. Counting on another person to provide for these things or even your own happiness is very dangerous.  What another person gives to you, they can take away. If you give something to yourself, however, it’s yours as along as you exist.

www.ThePrincessGuide.com

A key to loving yourself is actually liking yourself. You can only like a person if you spend time getting to know them. We can often be bombarded by our own thoughts and become used to our ways of talking and reacting, that we don’t even know that we are funny, charming, the life of the party, beautiful, etc. It helps when other people point these things out to get our attention, but even that isn’t necessary. Treating ourselves like we’re getting to know a new person is all it really takes.

“Be alone. Eat alone. Take yourself on dates. You will learn about yourself. You will grow. You will figure out what inspires you. You will curate your own dreams, your own beliefs, your own stunning clarity. And when you do meet the person who makes your cells dance, you will be sure of it because you will be sure of yourself,” instructed an Instagram meme attributed to Bianca Sparacino.

Stella had to go to Jamaica to get her groove back in the book How Stella Got Her Groove Back. Not all of us can afford such an extravagant trip, but you don’t need an island vacation nor a younger man to get your confidence back. In fact, those things are actually detrimental to the long-term survival of your confidence because they are outside things—real, lasting confidence is totally an inside job. Like the song says, “The world didn’t give it to me, and the world can’t take it away.” If you do the hard, internal work yourself, then no one can take the credit or take the confidence away.

People may come and go out of your life, but your core will not be destroyed because you will know without a shadow of a doubt that you are precious, worthy, and lovable. You will know that if you have been loved once, it can happen again and be even better than before!

You must also remember that you are deeply loved and cherished by the lover of your soul, Jesus. “It is a fact that many believers feel overwhelmed by the situations they face in life. In fact, they often feel so confused and weighed down that they wonder if God is still near to them. This is precisely why Paul adds (in Romans 8:38-39) that even life cannot separate a believer from the love of Jesus Christ,” wrote Rick Renner in Sparkling Gems from the Greek. Let’s take a look at how much you’re worth.

Do you want to get started on this (self) love train? This is just the introduction, but you can get the full e-book downloaded instantly to read on Kindle or any PDF reader.

Catch these first-run Write About It Wednesday blogs every Wednesday. If you want to know how to have successful relationships and peace of mind, you can get a free PDF sample chapter of “The Princess Guide to Healing a Broken Heart” by filling out the form in the sidebar on this page.