I’m Tired of Basic Human Needs Being Seen As “Self-Care” for Women.

A shower or trip to the grocery store alone is not self-care.

I’m all for bettering ourselves.

I’m a big fan of self-care, too. Five out of five stars. In fact, it took me many years and a little bit (OK — a lot) of therapy to realize that self-care is essential to your emotional well-being. No one can pour from an empty cup right?

It turns out self-care wasn’t just important, it was crucial to my survival.

With depression and anxiety in my DNA, I had to learn how to balance new motherhood with my mental illness and a key factor in finding that balance was realizing I wasn’t just pouring from an empty cup, I was pouring from an empty cup in the Sahara desert. There was no water in sight and I was still somehow drowning.

However, it seems like there is a subtle message popping up on pretty instagram accounts, and in facebook mom groups about self-care that is misleading and downright damaging.

The message? That basic human needs are self-care.

I’m so tired of basic human needs being touted by women as their favorite form of self-care.

Eating a meal, or having a cup of hot coffee should not be a form of self-care.

So often as women, our load is so great that we expect that taking any time for ourselves at all is the equivalent to self-care.

However, that’s not always the case. Psych Central defines self-care this way,

Women need to stop calling activities self-care that don’t bring joy or actually refuel.

In general, I think men are better at recognizing their own needs for self-care. My husband knows that mowing the yard alone isn’t his self-care. Yes, maybe it feels a little nicer than being inside with three whiney kids, but it’s still not self-care.

Women should ask themselves daily — What am I doing that is intentional, planned out, and solely for me to refuel my mind, body, and soul?

Let’s stop pretending we get self-care when we don’t. Not only is it damaging to our own mental and physical well being, but it’s sending the wrong message to those around us. Including our kids.

This content was originally published here.

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