Years ago a Nike print ad featured athletes with the tag line “Make Yourself.”
In the end, that’s what a person does in recovery: you have the chance to make yourself into who you want to be.
You don’t have to get a J.D. or M.D. You don’t have to do what I do.
You just have to be the kind of person that it gives you joy to be (regardless of the number on the bathroom scale).
Surprise–I think about the beauty and benefit of “self-acceptance” as a mantra in recovery.
If you’re not happy being you, ask yourself why exactly you’d rather be someone else. Change what you can of what you don’t like, and live with and forget the things you can’t change.
I’m 52–next week I will write about my 25th anniversary of being in remission.
Here now I want to write about self-acceptance because it’s the secret to feeling good about yourself. It could help to define what makes you a true original.
I would say my personality is “creative-kinetic.” Like the athletes in the Nike ad, I understand that there’s a power in creating yourself.
What I’m possessed with right now is a Deborah Harry quote. In a magazine, she said that all artists go “inching and crawling” towards their situation.
That sums up recovery: it too often involves going “inching and crawling” toward each goal; each milestone; each victory.
I will write more about recovery in here in my own inimitable way in the coming weeks–because it needs to be said what I have to say.
I’ll end here with this prelude: if you’re an artist, you cannot ever not do your art.
If you’re in recovery, you have to be true to yourself.
A good first step to embracing who you are is to remember that a mental health diagnosis is simply a tool for getting the treatment you need. It’s not who you are.
I call using your diagnosis to define yourself–I call this an “identity straitjacket.”
The beauty of living in recovery is that you get to decide how you want to describe yourself. That’s how I hit on my own two-word statement.
Try out your own self-definition. Meet me here next week when I talk about how I’ve been in remission for 25 years.