How can we heal together?

How can we heal together?

We need healing spaces.

We need spaces where we can be messy. Where we can cry. Where we can tell the truth about where we’re struggling. Where we can be seen in both our struggle and our brilliance by other people who “get it.”

I think that other people “getting it” can be really key.

I remember the first time I went to an Al-Anon meeting how much relief I felt.

I had felt so alone. I had just left an abusive relationship, and I missed my partner so much.

The format of a group of people with some shared underlying struggles being real with each other, opened my tear ducts and my heart. I began to heal because I began to see and hold myself with more compassion than I could when sobbing alone in my room at home.

Together we can hold what we cannot as easily hold alone.

I have felt the power of intentional containers for holding big emotions, big journeys.

When I did an intensive, residential, semester-long leadership program at Kripalu Center for Yoga and Health about 10 years ago, I remember so clearly experiencing the idea that a breakdown can be a breakthrough.

What I would add is… if it’s well supported.

Feelings are a natural part of the healing and growth process.

What's unnatural is when we feel like we have to hide them. When we can't share with each other about where we're really at.

A breakdown can be a breakthrough if you're supported.

And that’s so much more easily the case when there are larger structures of support holding you.

Going back to my experience at Al Anon... suddenly, in that room, I could feel. I could cry in a way that felt different than when I was on my own... I was held. There was compassion in the air. I could be real about what was happening, without having to censor or worry about my feelings being too big for somebody else to hold. Because we had a larger container.

At the end of the first Queer Body Love retreat I hosted, one of the participants, a native New Yorker, said at the end that she had never understood the hippie dippie California phrase about "holding space"... until the retreat. At the retreat, she felt how powerful a group of people with shared life experiences and intentions "holding space" for each other in those yurts in the woods could be.

Find spaces that can hold you. That can hold all parts of you.

For folks whose bodies have been multiply marginalized, this can be challenging to find. I sit writing this with the heartbreak and also the longing to be part of the creation of such spaces. I see them emerging all over the place, and I know that in some ways they're still rare.

I didn't realize when I began Queer Body Love two and a half years ago that there would be such a longing for community around the very particular intersections of queerness, body image, food and self love. What QBL spaces aims to hold has expanded and deepened, and will continue to do so, because I have experienced both the value and also the pain that can come when you seek healing and then you don't feel seen or supported for parts of who you are.

Seek people and spaces who will meet you. Know that if you feel shamed or not welcome because of your feelings... it's not about you.

You and your feelings are not too much.

Some people and spaces might not be able to hold them and you, and that doesn't mean that you are not worthy or that you're not too much. It means that we have opening and healing to do -- together -- to be able to meet each other more fully.

P.S. I heard about this online "Cry Club" Tumblr started by some folks in extended Bay Area community here where people post images of themselves crying. I've thought of it often when crying alone. 

your mind AND your body matters

your mind AND your body matters

You are brilliant, and your mind matters.

If you’re like me, sometimes it starts to go into overdrive.

Perhaps on overdrive critiquing absolutely everything.

So you start to get really hard on yourself.

It makes sense you’re tired, and want relief.

And the critiques matter.

How can you use the critiques to soften your judgment of yourself? To create space for understanding?

Then, from that place of understanding -- of using instead of disregarding the critiques in order to find relief -- remember that you’re a human, with a heart and a body.

Tend to yourself.

Listen to your critiques — they’re telling you something.

AND listen to your body — it’s also telling you something.

It’s not a zero sum game.

You’re brilliant and you’re human.

Tend to your mind and tend to your body. They're not opposites. They don't have to be doing battle. And not doing battle doesn't mean disregarding your intellect or critiques. It can all coexist.


This is one entry in the November Queer Body Love daily blog writing, where I will be exploring through writing what I see, think, pray, and question. I don’t know what liberation looks like, but I want that for you, and for us. This blog is me sharing a personal practice of being with the question of what that might look like in the hopes that it might be useful. If you're interested in personal support from me as your guide as you explore that in your own body and life, check out my newest 1-on-1 offering, SOFTEN. I can sit with you with so much love and compassion as you orient in the direction of more ease and comfort in your body and with yourself. Together we'll take a stand for new possibilities.

Always Learning

Always Learning

One of the best parts of starting Queer Body Love has been how much I’ve been able to learn from others — people I’ve interviewed, clients, and others who have crossed my path.

Today, I learned from Grace Quantock, who interviewed me for her Trailblazer Interview series. (My interview will be up in a couple months.) She works with folks to blaze a new trail when illness, disability, trauma or grief throws your life off track.

She pointed out a couple times when ideas I shared could have been more inclusive for folks with neurodivergence and/or disability.

I love that she did in the interview itself. Instead of other responses I could imagine myself holding (judging in the moment, stewing in resentment after), she simply shared her perspective, strong, clear, and also open.

We were able to flow with the learnings with grace because of our mutual trust of each other.

Accepting that I am not and never will be “perfect” is what allowed me to be easeful within myself and with her.

I sometimes lovingly say that I’m a “recovering perfectionist.”

Similar to my previous relationship with food, where I set up dichotomous “good” versus “bad” food, one phase I have had to go through is rebelling and reacting against previously held perfectionism.

Now, I live from the perspective that recovering from perfectionism doesn’t mean throwing away my values. I can have high standards for myself and who I chose to interact with.

It means not basing my self-worth on a predetermined ideal.

And, I know that I often still harden and judge others when I see something that doesn’t feel right to me, instead of coming from a perspective of trust and calling others forth to meet me.

Here’s a story from yesterday of how my initial impulse is definitely not what Grace so beautifully modeled for me.

I leaned into support to align the way I communicate so I moved from my traditional ways of collapsing or attacking to being clear and strong.

Somebody invited me to participate in their coaching interview series yesterday. I didn’t want to participate because it seemed like a typical white/cis/het/thin/able-bodied woman who didn’t seem to have much focus on intersectionality. I wanted her to think about the fact that her being unconsciously “neutral” in her business is not actually neutral and can cause harm. (See these two amazing blog posts by Layla Saad, “I need to talk to spiritual white women
about white supremacy” Part One and Two that I ended up sending her for more on this if you’re interested.)

I asked a friend to read over my response. She said that a particular sentence where I critiqued the person who invited me felt like a “stab in the heart.” Now, in some contexts this is skillful. In this moment it did not feel so. So I shifted my response to come from the perspective that she probably wanted to learn and expand her awareness instead of cutting her down without ever having actually talked to her about it.

We ended up having a pleasant exchange where I felt like I was able to be clear and helpful — actually more in alignment with my values than had I simply cut her down.

I said no, I told her why, and opened the door for her to think about the issues.

She responded quickly with gratitude and grace, and we had a pleasant exchange that feels like it’s building towards creating the world I want.

It felt way better than compromising my values and just doing it anyway, or cutting down somebody who I judged without much compassion or room for them to meet me.

**Note -- this is NOT intended to tone police anybody or say that this is the "ideal" or "better" way of handling a situation, particularly if you're marginalized and dealing with somebody who doesn't share those identities.


This is one entry in the November Queer Body Love daily blog writing, where I will be exploring through writing what I see, think, pray, and question. I don’t know what liberation looks like, but I want that for you, and for us. This blog is me sharing a personal practice of being with the question of what that might look like in the hopes that it might be useful. If you're interested in personal support from me as your guide as you explore that in your own body and life, check out my newest 1-on-1 offering, SOFTEN. I can sit with you with so much love and compassion as you orient in the direction of more ease and comfort in your body and with yourself. Together we'll take a stand for new possibilities.

A 3 Minute Exercise to Snap Out of Overthinking and Into Presence

A 3 Minute Exercise to Snap Out of Overthinking and Into Presence

Because this exercise came up not just once but twice yesterday, I'd like to share it with you.

Also because yesterday I found myself completely spinning out, feeling frozen -- unable to move forward with my goals and unable to "do self care" in a conscious way.

When you're feeling stuck, there are so many different ways of navigating.

Today's suggestions for self-soothing and getting present when you're spinning out:

1) Do what is smallest and easiest.

2) Allow yourself to be guided & held.

So that's what I aim to offer with this mini, literally 3 minute guided meditation. (There are slight scratching sounds -- practicing imperfect action and letting this offering be easy for me to offer you.)

Attribution: My yoga teacher guided us in this exercise yesterday morning and shared that it comes from Somatic Experiencing. I'm not sure about the influences of the second person (Ije, from Turtle Tank) who guided me in it yesterday.


This is one entry in the November Queer Body Love daily blog writing, where I will be exploring through writing what I see, think, pray, and question. I don’t know what liberation looks like, but I want that for you, and for us. This blog is me sharing a personal practice of being with the question of what that might look like in the hopes that it might be useful. If you're interested in personal support from me as your guide as you explore that in your own body and life, check out my newest 1-on-1 offering, SOFTEN. I can sit with you with so much love and compassion as you orient in the direction of more ease and comfort in your body and with yourself. Together we'll take a stand for new possibilities.

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Pre Breakup Disorientation

You know that feeling when you know you have to breakup with somebody but you're scared to actually do it?

You know it's not right.

But it's hard to let go of the dream and the hopes of what it could be.

You don't want to let go of what's there, and what might be possible, because you've put time and energy into those dreams.

It can be hard to know when it's time to let go.

And there's the fear of stepping into the unknown.

Maybe you'll be lonely.

Everybody's breaking point is different.

It might be strange to see this writing after a post about Queer Love yesterday.

But it's actually necessary to let go of what's not working so that we can create space for these new possibilities.

I had a great conversation with Anjali Nath, founder of Liberation Spring, today that helped me gain clarity about needing to have the courage to actively walk away from projects/people/spaces that don't live up to my standards. A metaphor she shared with me really helped me visualize the process:

pulling weeds so you can plant seeds

It takes bravery to not just "let go", but actively step away from what you know.

This can SO be the case in relation to dieting and how we perceive our bodies and our identities.

When we've poured a ton of energy into trying to shape our body and presentation to gain love and acceptance, it can feel like quite the leap of faith to think that we may be able to actually be happy on our own terms in our own body.

I'm here to tell you that if you're called to that, it's a worthy endeavor that thousands have done before you.

It's possible to be fat and happy. It's possible to celebrate your body in the way you want to celebrate it.

But first, for that to be possible, you gotta breakup with the idea that you have to change who you are based on other peoples' ideas of what that looks like.

You gotta pull the weeds so you can plant the seeds.

You don't need to diet or do anything that anybody else says you need to.

And, like I write about above, going through that realization and breakup, especially when so much of your time and energy has gone into another narrative, can feel really disorienting and challenging.

Here's my challenge to you -- Actively disengage from that anything that bolsters stories you no longer want to dictate your thoughts, actions and life.

And one specific suggestion for today: clean up your digital space - unsubscribe, unfollow and unlike anything that is trying to "take your self-esteem, cheapen it and sell it back to you at a profit", as Ragen Chastain quoted her friend CJ in her latest Queer Body Love Speaker Series interview (you can buy the full series here).

And then, start following people who live in their bodies unapologetically.

Here are a few good people to start with on Instagram:

Virgie TovarCaleb Luna, and Bevin Branlandingham.

Who do you love to follow? Feel free to comment or email me at elizabeth@elizabethjcooper.com


P.S. Thank you to Sophie Macklin for so clearly seeing the correlation between how I was feeling (disoriented, angry and fearful) and typical pre-breakup feels.

This is one entry in the November Queer Body Love daily blog writing, where I will be exploring through writing what I see, think, pray, and question. I don’t know what liberation looks like, but I want that for you, and for us. This blog is me sharing a personal practice of being with the question of what that might look like in the hopes that it might be useful. If you're interested in personal support from me as your guide as you explore that in your own body and life, check out my newest 1-on-1 offering, SOFTEN. I can sit with you with so much love and compassion as you orient in the direction of more ease and comfort in your body and with yourself. Together we'll take a stand for new possibilities.

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Queer Love & Possibilities

Queer Love & Possibilities

Today's writing comes to you from an Instagram post I wrote, because I'm experimenting with different formats for this daily writing.

I’m a stand for new possibilities.
*
Yes, in some ways this is just another cute #queercouple selfie. (And hell yes, double click to show your love for #queerromance). And, this shot from the most beautiful and magical #queer and #transwedding was also about so much more.
*
I’m a stand for new possibilities — for creating new ways of being in our bodies, ourselves and with each other. This wedding, themed “A Celebration of Glittering Hedonism” lit my heart on fire. I felt, in an embodied way, a taste of new possibilities that I want for the world, myself, my clients and my communities.
*
My #QueerBodyLove business is essentially me, offering myself, my philosophy, my values, my presence and love to the world. And this past weekend, I both felt the most recent fruits of the personal/spiritual work I’ve been doing within myself, and also saw, in action, how another couple with similar values actively doing the work of creating a partnership and love “that feeds” has inspired and strengthened new ways of being, deep connections and community.
*
That’s what I want, for myself and for you.
*
Here are my invitations, for myself, and for you.
*
I vow to listen to myself and do my own work so I can sit with you as you do yours.
*
I will say no so I can say hell yes. Own my beauty and power. Invite support. Offer myself fully. Soften with my self-judgment. Open my heart. Let go of what no longer serves me. Rewrite my stories. Sit in my discomfort. Soften with it. Tell the truth. Be with myself in a new way that creates space for us to see what is alive between us.


This is one entry in the November Queer Body Love daily blog writing, where I will be exploring through writing what I see, think, pray, and question. I don’t know what liberation looks like, but I want that for you, and for us. This blog is me sharing a personal practice of being with the question of what that might look like in the hopes that it might be useful. If you're interested in personal support from me as your guide as you explore that in your own body and life, check out my newest 1-on-1 offering, SOFTEN. I can sit with you with so much love and compassion as you orient in the direction of more ease and comfort in your body and with yourself. Together we'll take a stand for new possibilities.

acceptance of anxiety

Today, I am working with anxiety.

Even writing that out, knowing I will be sharing it with you, I feel my body begin to relax.

There are many, many different ways of “working with” feelings… and most often, particularly having a business in the “self-development” industry, my focus tends to be centered on “working with” in order to “make it better.” And this is exactly where I can tend to spin myself into more and more anxiety. By trying to "fix it."

I personally tend to skip over the step of accepting myself and my feelings.

The very step that I emphasize, again and again, with my clients. There's a reason I need to emphasize it. It's so against so much of what we're taught in Western culture.

Today, I am not focusing on "working with" the anxiety. I'm simply working (on Queer Body Love), with anxiety by my side. I'm acknowledging that it's there with me, not trying to change it.

Hi, anxiety! At least in this moment. It may go away, but have you ever tried to shoo away a child who really wants your attention? So today, I greet it with kindness. Trying to do a ton of things to “prove to myself” that I’m a “worthy person” (my tendency) isn’t actually the underlying shift I need to make.

The shift I need to make is towards acceptance of myself even, and especially, when I don’t feel super hot.

What if it were okay if I didn’t always feel like everything flowed with joy and ease? What if I accepted that being in this human body with human emotions means that I will have good days, bad days, glorious days, hideous days, everything in between, and of course, totally boring, “normal” days, and days with ups and downs and twists and turns? In other words, what if I accepted each moment as it came?

And then, from a place of acceptance, I can be curious about what the feelings are trying to tell me.

The anxiety of today comes from perfectionism, lack of clarity, and feeling like there is one right way.

What can I tidy up in this moment, for me and for you? What can I clarify to create more ease?

There's work that can be done in many levels with all of those underlying causes of anxiety. And in this moment, there's actually a really simple action I can take to clarify something for me and for you.

I said this blog writing would be a daily practice and offering. In my mind I hadn’t been completely sure whether this would be daily daily, or weekday daily.

This past weekend I went to a fabulous wedding (themed “Celebration of Glittering Hedonism” at hot springs… ohmygod amazing... will have to write about that in some other posts) and didn’t write.

So, I’ve been sitting in underlying judgment of myself for failing, already, with my daily anchor of writing in November.

Vagueness / underlying perfectionism that hasn't even been clarified so I can work with it ---> anxiety (and, luckily, is shiftable!).

In this moment, since I (and you, and we) make up the rules… the rules of the game is that I will have freshly written writing at least 5 days a week, and if there’s more than that it’s icing on the cake.

And with that... "see" you tomorrow!


This is one entry in the November Queer Body Love daily blog writing, where I will be exploring through writing what I see, think, pray, and question. I don’t know what liberation looks like, but I want that for you, and for us. This blog is me sharing a personal practice of being with the question of what that might look like in the hopes that it might be useful. If you're interested in personal support from me as your guide as you explore that in your own body and life, check out my newest 1-on-1 offering, SOFTEN. I can sit with you with so much love and compassion as you orient in the direction of more ease and comfort in your body and with yourself. Together we'll take a stand for new possibilities.

When Self-Love Isn't Enough

I'm at the Walnut Creek (California) library after going to a talk by Dr. Lindo Bacon*, "When Self-Love Isn't Enough: How Health Practitioners Can Support Body Appreciation in an Unjust World."

I just love the title. One of my biggest issues with the self-help industry is its focus on, well, the self. I suppose it makes sense, given the name of the industry. And, I think that this focus on the individual can end up creating more individual shame and isolation because we end up feeling like it's all on us to fix everything.

One of the solutions is seeing ourselves reflected and understanding larger context. That we actually are not alone when we hate on ourselves around our bodies not fitting into predetermined cultural ideals of perfection.

Reading Health at Every Size (and then diving down the rabbit hole of fat studies/liberation work) and The Beauty Myth (and many other feminist pieces) in college alleviated my individual shame and awakened both anger and acceptance.

Suddenly my own relationship to dieting, losing weight and gaining weight made a ton of sense to me culturally. That it wasn't my fault. I was taking in the cultural messages that I would be loved and accepted if I lost weight. And feeling alienated from myself and others after recently discovering my queerness, I jumped on that bandwagon.

"Just loving myself," wasn't enough. Combining theory with personal development and healing was the magic formula for me.

Dr. Lindo Bacon shared stories she's never revealed publicly before today of how her relationship with her gender identity and presentation impacted her eating disorder. She wanted to lose weight to align her body with her internal sense of masculinity.

Our many identities impact how we seek love and acceptance -- and trying to change our bodies, which impacts how we are seen by others -- is one main approach.

It makes sense. It all makes sense.

And now the question comes, and remains -- how can we be with it, accept it, and change things, on a personal and collective level?


This is one entry in the November Queer Body Love daily blog writing, where I will be exploring through writing what I see, think, pray, and question. I don’t know what liberation looks like, but I want that for you, and for us. This blog is me sharing a personal practice of being with the question of what that might look like in the hopes that it might be useful. If you're interested in personal support from me as your guide as you explore that in your own body and life, check out my newest 1-on-1 offering, SOFTEN. I can sit with you with so much love and compassion as you orient in the direction of more ease and comfort in your body and with yourself. Together we'll take a stand for new possibilities.

embracing not knowing

A dear friend and previous coach, Sophie Macklin (who just opened 10 spots for "Fuck you patriarchy, I'm going to claim what I need to thrive" coaching sessions which I highly recommend), asks me this simple question a lot:

What's true?

She asks me this when I'm caught in a state of anxious confusion, usually wanting to find some "right" answer that will make me a "good" person. For example, I might be going on to her about "well, I think that this person might think XYZ thing about me and I'm really wanting to create more ease in our relationship, so maybe I should say XYZ thing... what do you think?"

To which she'll throw the ball back in my court by asking me what's true... which, to some extent, can feel infuriating. What is truth? How can I even know?

And, sitting with this lack of knowing can feel like a relief, because it's being real about lack of certainty.

What's super true is that I don't know.

And at the same time, the question cuts through the bullshit to what I do know. Because we all do have some truths that we carry within ourselves. (Paradoxically, I actually wrote about how you DO KNOW yesterday in a new daily Queer Body Love blog that I just started.)

Holding the paradoxes of knowing and not knowing is part of being human.

It can create so much more freedom and flexibility in how we move through life when we embrace this simple truth -- that there's much that we know (in a variety of ways), and much that we don't.

From this place of embracing ambiguity, the question I've been asking myself is what liberation (personal and collective, because we can't truly have personal liberation without collective liberation) looks like. To be honest, I feel very far from knowing that truth.

And, at the same time, there have been some core tenants and ideas from feminist, fat and queer theory as well as spiritual paths, that have created a sense of much deeper worthiness in myself, which to me has felt like a taste of freedom.

That's what I want for you.

Despite and in the midst of all the confusion of how we navigate this confusing world, I want you to have some relief.

I believe that relief can come from a mix of some perspectives, some tools, and community. Other people to sit with you as you share and unpack what's true for you.

Next week, I'd like to offer that to you in the form of two free Queer Body Love Webinars.

  1. Tuesday, November 7th, 6 pm PST / 9 pm EST /  Wednesday, November 8th at noon ACT (Australia)
  2. Friday, November 10th, 11:00 am PST / 2:00 pm EST / 7:00 pm GMT (UK time)

By clicking on the link below you can sign up to access either one.

I so look forward to having you! And please, feel free to invite friends by sending them the link to sign up as well: https://www.elizabethjcooper.com/webinar. If this Queer Body Love work and community is doing it for you, spread the love :)


This is one entry in the November Queer Body Love daily blog writing, where I will be exploring through writing what I see, think, pray, and question. I don’t know what liberation looks like, but I want that for you, and for us. This blog is me sharing a personal practice of being with the question of what that might look like in the hopes that it might be useful. If you're interested in personal support from me as your guide as you explore that in your own body and life, check out my newest 1-on-1 offering, SOFTEN. I can sit with you with so much love and compassion as you orient in the direction of more ease and comfort in your body and with yourself. Together we'll take a stand for new possibilities.

You know

You think you don’t know, but you do.

So much that comes from outside of us tries to convince us and confuse us.

Within your heart you already know.

It’s just about developing the muscle of listening.

Historically, I’ve often gotten caught in confusion and anxiety, and lately something one of my mentors pretty much shouted at me...

KNOW SOMETHING

...has continued to reverberate in my heart/body/mind. In a calling me forward kind of way.

And here’s a more gentle example of how another coach supported the connection with this sense of knowing within myself: in a coaching session, I started to dip into the mire of confusion, and my coach bestowed upon me a straw from the hotel drink station, saying “this is the straw of knowing” and asked me a follow up question. Suddenly, holding the straw, I knew the answer.

I heard this nugget of wisdom last weekend: “Intuition speaks in sentences. Ego speaks in paragraphs.”

If you notice yourself spinning, speaking to yourself in fragmented, long sentences that are masquerading as term papers, getting lost in confusion, connect with whatever will help you remember that you actually already know. Even if it’s that you know you need help, or need to sit with the question, or need to learn more so that you can make an informed decision. You know the next step.


This is one entry in the November Queer Body Love daily blog writing, where I will be exploring through writing what I see, think, pray, and question. I don’t know what liberation looks like, but I want that for you, and for us. This blog is me sharing a personal practice of being with the question of what that might look like in the hopes that it might be useful. If you're interested in personal support from me as your guide as you explore that in your own body and life, check out my newest 1-on-1 offering, SOFTEN. I can sit with you with so much love and compassion as you orient in the direction of more ease and comfort in your body and with yourself. Together we'll take a stand for new possibilities.

release, release, release

release, release, release

I think of y'all all the time, did you know that?

And this morning, a "release & gather" meditation felt like the most heartfelt offering. So I just hit record, let it flow, and now I'm sending it to you.

Why? Because this is what's been present for me and folks around me, and I thought it would be helpful for you.

Tuesday night, after asking for some support to help me let go of some unhelpful energetic baggage, I ended up leading a meditation on the topic for five other beautiful folks in my queer collective house.

Then last night, I held space for a friend struggling with the feelings of disgust she had at the internalized fatphobic, patriarchical thoughts impacting her experience relating to other people's eating habits. The shit that we don't even like to admit to ourselves that we're thinking, let alone others.

I listened. I validated that it comes from patriarchy.

I told her -- You're SO not alone in those thoughts, and it does not make you a bad person.

In fact, noticing them with compassion and critical consciousness is the first step to letting them go.

Unhelpful thinking that feels harmful to yourself and others is the worst. And it's not your fault. That's what happens just living in our culture, and typically without active, conscious letting go of these thought patterns they stay, quite persistently. They need conscious deprogramming. That is why I do what I do. That is why we need each other and support to be with the hard thoughts / feelings, and to chose to let them go.

I hope that this meditation can be useful in that endeavor.

It's 14.5 minutes, totally raw and uncut -- recorded from my meditation cushion just a half hour ago, straight to you.

Feel free to let me know what you think.

xo

Elizabeth

my most important act of self care yesterday

my most important act of self care yesterday

Yesterday, I cried. Quite a lot. Hard. Not a tear down my cheek. Ugly crying.

Crying was my most important act of self care yesterday. Not going to yoga, not attending a group call, not reaching out for support, not spending time with people I loved, not cuddles... crying. If I hadn't let myself cry, those emotions would likely still be really stuck in me. They're still there - and I feel a lot more peaceful this morning because I let myself cry.

At my semester long yoga & leadership development program I did almost 10 years ago, I remember distinctly them telling us to not give people who were crying kleenex unless they indicated they wanted them, because it could send the message "stop crying."

It's no wonder we don't feel our feelings or cry (especially if we are more masculine presenting or raised male) -- we're told not to. There are many other ways that we have and continue to externally receive this message to stop crying -- shh, don't cry, you're okay / you'll be okay / it's okay...

We don't need to change or fix tears -- they're simply part of the process of being human and allowing the feelings that come up.

Sometimes it just doesn't feel okay, and crying is 100% the most skillful way of allowing the emotions to flow.

Here's what I tried to do with my feelings before letting them flow that didn't work out so well:
  1. Try to ignore them
  2. Judge them, trying to make them different
  3. Try to move immediately to "fixing" the situation
A friend who knew the context of my sadness gave me an immensely helpful response when I reached out yesterday.

I now pass on these helpful reminders to skillfully allow yourself to cry:
  1. Invitation to feel your feelings
  2. Validation -- they make sense
  3. A reminder that they will not last, and that once you allow them and release them you'll have space to look directly towards my challenge
So... why bother feeling? What's the benefit of allowing yourself to cry?
  1. You will feel more connected to yourself
  2. You can be more fully yourself
  3. By allowing the emotions to flow you can release them and move on

So what's this to do with Queer Body Love?

I've been thinking a lot about what Queer Body Love means to me as I redesign my website (coming soon!), and a lot of it is becoming okay with ourselves.

To be okay with ourselves, we have to know what's there. We might not always like it, and that's when we typically go through the list above of "unhelpful" ways of dealing with emotions.

Allowing and accepting your feelings creates space for you.

But don't take it from me. Try it on.

The next time you find some emotions lurking underneath the surface that you may be trying to ignore, judge or fix, remember this email, and see what it might be like to let them express themselves, whether that be through crying or some other means.

See how that feels, and let me know if you'd like by leaving a comment.

Sending much love,

Elizabeth