Category Archives: Selfies

Introducing the Selfie Starter Guidebook

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I’m super excited to share that the Selfie Starter Guidebook is here! I really wanted to create something for those folks who might be drawn to this work of taking selfies and seeing ourselves with compassion, but aren’t sure where to begin. Or have lots of questions that feel like they are in the way of beginning. Or are nervous to take a class but an E-Book feels like a more comfortable place to begin!

The E-Book Covers topics like:

  • What is a Selfie
  • The Gear you Might Need (and my DIY approach)
  • How to take your Selfie (all those questions you might worry are ‘silly questions’ answered).
  • How to Hold or Prop Your Camera
  • Types of Selfies (and tips for taking each kind)
  • 3 Selfie Activities for you to Try
  • Playfulness and Experimentation
  • The importance of taking LOTS of photos (and having outtakes)
  • Indoor and Outdoor Selfie Location Ideas
  • Letting go of worries of what others might think
  • My favourite resources and posts for you to continue exploring though!

And even if you have taken one of the classes already, this E-Book can be a great companion for your journey if you’ve already taken the Beloved Beginnings or Be Your Own Beloved E-Courses and a reminder of some of the technical and selfie approaches you’ve explored in class (plus different prompts than you’ll find in those 2 classes).

Head on over here to get your Selfie Starter Guide!

Separating Selfies and Social Media (and taking our Selfies, for Ourselves)

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Often in conversations around selfies, especially those bashing selfies, the argument is that selfies invite people to be narcissistic, make them focus on getting other people’s attention and that we do them to get likes or comments.

And yes, I know selfies are defined as “a photograph that one has taken of oneself, typically one taken with a smartphone or webcam and shared via social media”. So, if someone hasn’t taken them, it’s easy to look at that definition and think that is all it is.

 

But that isn’t my experience. 

That’s not what I’m seeing around me or on social media itself.

That isn’t the way I approach it in my classes.

Quite the opposite in fact. 

 

When the term selfie emerged in 2013 with the shifting of the tools we were able to take selfies with, when most phones not only had a camera but a front facing one in which we could see ourselves, selfie culture emerged.

But that word ‘typically’ in the definition of a selfie is an open door, one I see so many people choosing to walk through. To not be typical, to actively change how and why we take selfies.

For many of us, taking our own photo is incredibly empowering. It allows us to take the power back into our own hands, to create our own visual media, especially when we don’t see ourselves reflected back in visual media culture. It becomes a truly different experience than having our photo taken by someone else. We are the photographer, the subject, the lighting director, the artistic director and the artist that takes the raw photo and adds a creative spark to it.

Not only that, but it is a doorway to our relationship to ourselves. I hear so many people say that they see a photo of themselves and it feels like a stranger. I felt that too when I started taking self-portraits. But I started to see her as someone I wanted to befriend, to get to know her, to not have pre-concieved notions of who she might be or how she might look in the photo.

The camera became a way to get to know myself and to create a relationship that was based on compassion, forgiveness and possibility. 

And it had nothing to do with social media.

I think it’s a big roadblock to people especially when they start taking selfies, to think that it needs to be a photo that is shared. Starting from this place of taking it for other people’s viewing will only take us so far. It leaves us thinking:

What will other people think?

Will anyone like it?

Will it be worthy of likes and comments?

 

But that is not really about selfies at all. It’s about our relationship to other people, our self-worth and our relationship to social media.

Selfies and social media are not the same thing. 

What about taking our selfies, for ourselves?

If we DO choose to share our selfies on social media, then I really encourage people to get clear on their own answers to those questions first and reframe it:

What do I think about my photo?

What about it resonates or makes me want to share it?

What do I like about the photo and what would I say to that ME in the photo if I were to comment on this image?

When we ground ourselves in our own power, in our own relationship to our photo before we share it, it profoundly changes the experience. And when you experience this, you’ll see that it’s not out of ego or self-focus, it’s about building a relationship to ourselves, to valuing our own self-perceptions with the same weight (or more) than we might hold other’s opinions.

Because we can never predict or control how other people are going to respond to a photo and I don’t know about you, but I don’t want to ride the rollercoaster of other people’s opinions of me as my core information for my own worthiness. I want to define that separate from what anyone might think.

We have a right to be in our own visual story, to see ourselves reflected in the photos of our life.

And they are worthy whether we share them or not.

And yes, sometimes I’ll find myself taking a photo and will realize that I took it craving likes and comments from other people and it’s a wake up call. An invitation to return to those questions, that self-inquiry.

Then, when we do choose to share them, if we choose to share them, people’s encouragement becomes a bonus, not where we are deriving our worthiness.

Because we have already offered ourselves that.

And it’s a process, but I think often we don’t think of selfies as being separate from social media, but they are.

What photo would you take today if you weren’t worrying about what anyone else thought? How would you view your selfie differently if it was only you seeing it?

Let’s start there.

Let’s fill up our own well first and then choose to share if we want to.

Let’s reclaim selfies as an act of self-care, separate from the act of sharing it.

Try it today, take a selfie just for you…I dare you!

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6 Ways to Notice Your Body Stories

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What are the stories we believe about our bodies?

What if they weren’t true…especially those ones your inner critic has invited you to believe?

What if you offered yourself space to step back and acknowledge what you have taken to be true stories about your body (perhaps even with photos seen as proof of those old stories). What if the camera could also be a tool for re-writing those stories?

That’s what we’re doing this coming month in the Body Stories Class and leading up to getting started I’ve been asking the folks already registered to start noticing what they are (and when you sign up I’ll send you over that invite too).

But today I thought I’d share some of the ways that our bodies stories often come up and how we can notice them.

 

When we say ‘TOO’ about ourselves

The word ‘Too’ is a major red flag that you’re speaking a body story in your head or aloud.

Too big, too small, too curvy, too outside the norm, too visible, too invisible, too different, too tall, too petite, too….anything.

When we use the word TOO it means that we’ve created a norm that is enough or worthy and that we see ourselves as outside of that. But we are not. We have the freedom to shift what we perceive as the norm and include ourselves in it!

 

When we have a story that goes “I can’t _________ because _________”

I’ve had SO many of these. The stories of things you want to do, wear, be, and the reason you can’t which is usually something about our bodies. That there are certain things that someone of our shape and size should or shouldn’t be doing or wearing or feeling empowered by.

For me, one of those was wearing running tights. I had banned myself from wearing running tights, especially the ones where I might be able to see my upper thighs. But then slowly but surely, I eased towards them and one day it happened. I shared about that body story here and how I realized that day that I could rock running leggings and it wasn’t because my body had shrunk, but in fact because my shame around my body had!

 

The things people said once that we hold to be true

This is a big one. What are those stories that perhaps someone once said, that we hold as truth? I think we all have these and I know many are from my formative years when I was in the midst of developing my sense of self and these words got written into the dialogue of my worthiness.

One of the ways that has helped me let go of some of these, which is to put it into context and remember that it was actually a reflection of the body stories of the person who said it. And I chose to let it be mine too, but I don’t have to. It’s not the truth, it’s someone else’s interpretation of my body and it’s worthiness. It’s a simple thing…it has taken a lot of practice to remember to do in the moment I’m living that body story.

 

When we reject compliments

A powerful place to notice our body stories and catch ourselves in ones that no longer serve us is to notice when we reject or invalidate or defer a compliment. Compliments are someone offering us kindness and sharing the beauty or gratitude they have for us. We can chose to reject it or let it in. And yes, letting it in is vulnerable. And it takes practice. Let’s not shame ourselves for rejecting compliments though, but instead notice when we do. What are the new stories people might be offering you that you could let in.

I shared in this blog post how a comment from my boxing coach woke me up to a body story I had about my legs and how it helped shift a story I’d been holding onto for a LONG time about my body and it’s worthiness.

 

When we compare ourselves to someone else 

When it really comes down to it, we are in a body story when we separate ourselves from the fact that our bodies (yup, everyones body) is inherently worthy. No one is exempt from that, even if we have tried to convince ourselves that ours is not.

When we compare ourselves to others we have created that standard of what is worthy and are not including ourselves in it. In all of the new Be Your own Beloved programs this year including Body Stories we are working on shifting our perception of ‘the norm’ or that standard we have been comparing ourselves too and inviting ourselves to be included in what we see as worthy, as enough, as lovable…yes, even beautiful!

 

Anything our Inner Critic Says!

Our inner critic is an awesome storyteller isn’t it. It has a way of reminding us of all these things above, of bringing back these stories again and again. And of course, our inner critic is trying to protect us and keep us safe from change. It wants us to stay in our old stories. But it doesn’t have our best interests at heart. We do.

Noticing what is coming from our inner critic is most definitely a way to acknowledge a body story. In all of the Be Your Own Beloved classes our goal is to strengthen our own voice outside of our inner critic and redefine how WE see ourselves.

So if you’re inner critic says it, it’s a body story (and not the truth)!

 

And yes, we all have body stories. But the more we can wake up to them and acknowledge them, the more we can shift away from them. So how do we change them?

One of the most powerful ways that has helped me is yes, the camera! It is BECAUSE the camera and yes, selfies brings up our body stories that it can be a place where we change those stories. That’s what we’re doing in the Body Stories Class…we’re noticing and starting the process of letting go of our old stories, opening the door for new ones to emerge.

This is an invitation to listen deeply to the voice inside us that might be whispering alongside a loud inner critic, but it’s there…that voice saying “I don’t believe that story I’ve held about my body and I’m ready for a new one.”

Join me in reclaiming your voice of compassion back from your inner critic and from the ways you’ve been defining your worthiness though stories that you have about your body!

The Body Stories class starts March 1st (only a few days away) and once you register I’ll get you set up with some pre-class questions to ponder!

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Our Body Stories

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One of the biggest realizations I’ve found through taking self-portraits is being able to begin to notice what the stories I have about my body are.

Because before, I just took them to be truths. That my body was ‘too big’ or my hair was too thin or my belly was too bloated. Really, anything that includes the words TOO and compares ourselves to others is a big sign that it is a story.

Because all bodies are good bodies. All bodies are inherently worthy.

The way we define ourselves in comparison to others or to a societal standard…those are the stories we hold about our body, our enoughness.

Realizing that these things I held as truths were actually stories was a wake up call. Because if it wasn’t a truth, if it was an interpretation of what is enough that I’d made to feel as though it was the truth…it could change. 

And the camera? Well, it brings up those stories. It is vulnerable to let ourselves be in images. We may be able to walk the world without those stories arising but then it feels like they await us in an image. It can even feel as though images are ‘proof’ of those stories. But it is BECAUSE they arise there that it’s also a platform for re-writing them.

In all the Be Your Own Beloved classes we step into being the narrator of our own story. We listen for our own voice outside of our inner critics voice.

This March, I’m offering a powerful 15 day program inviting you to acknowledge and reclaim your body stories. In this class we will:

  • Re-Connect with our body and it’s wisdom through the act of taking our selfies and integrating body awareness and mindfulness into the moment we take our selfies inviting in connection rather than disconnection
  • Begin to notice and acknowledge what the stories we have about our body are
  • Explore the way we can change our body stories and begin to let go of the critical stories that no longer serve us
  • Listen and strengthen our own voice of how we see ourselves, outside of our critics voice. We’ll notice the spaces that our inner critic is loud and make room for compassion there.
  • Invite in non-judgement and neutrality around our body.

Plus, when you register, I’ll send you over a worksheet to get started on pondering your body stories even before class begins!

This is an invitation to listen deeply to the voice inside us that might be whispering alongside a loud inner critic, but it’s there…that voice saying “I don’t believe that story I’ve held about my body anymore…and it’s time for a new one”.

This program isn’t about seeing our bodies completely anew in 15 days, but is about having a whole new way of seeing ourselves in only 15 days, but what we will do is wake ourselves up to the stories we’ve been judging ourselves by for a very long time and open ourselves up to the idea that they aren’t the truth.

They are indeed stories.

They are permeable, changeable.

They can be re-written, when we become the narrator.

bodystories250Let’s be the narrator of our own stories, and choose stories that treat us the same way we’d treat a beloved! 

Join me for Body Stories! Class starts March 1st (only 1 more week).

Introducing Body Peace!

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I’m beyond excited to finally share what I’ve got planned for the Be Your Own Beloved workshops this year.

Introducing the Body Peace Program! This is a year long journey to make peace with your body using the tool of self-portraiture to shift from a critical to a compassionate relationship with your self-image and self-esteem. It follows up on the transformation and spark that the original Beloved has created in people’s lives and takes it a step further.

Made up of 8 powerful programs throughout 2016 and the compassionate community the Be Your Own Beloved programs are known for, the Body Peace program help you change the way you relate to your body and treat yourself.

The idea of doing a year long program was sparked a few years ago but took a while for me to settle in on the right balance of empowering activities combined with space to let it soak in, space to let ourselves go at our own pace. The plan was solidified about doing this program in 2016 after I noticed how many alumni of the Be Your Own Beloved were returning for multiple sessions even within the same year…it was clear that a more continued community experience as well as continuing to have selfie activities and encouragement was something folks who took these classes were yearning for.

The program launched registration last week and we just started to gather together in our community Facebook Group leading up to class and as folks join in on the program I’ll get you all set up and you’ll be welcomed with open arms into the community.

I can’t wait to see what this year brings and can’t wait to dig deeper into creating pockets of body peace with the folks who join in. This program isn’t about never having a negative thought about our bodies again, but rather building self-trust and our own voice about how we feel about our bodies to counteract what our inner critic might say.

Much like with all my classes, the activities are derived from my own practice of using selfies as a tool to heal negative body-image and make peace with myself through the camera. As I’ve been teaching these classes over the past 4 years, I’ve been noticing what changes when we continue this practice over a longer span of time and well, what I found was that life (and my relationship with my inner critic) just got a lot more peaceful. I’d been at war with myself for along time so this peace was a welcome relief.

So that’s a big part of why the program is called Body Peace. To give us space to make peace with our body and who we see it. To cultivate more spaces of peace from our inner critic.

The program is made up of 8 classes and you can find out about them all here! There is an option to pay in full or do 2 payments instead (and you can find them both on the Body Peace Page).

The first program is called Selfie Compassion and it’s actually starting January 1st! It’s our foundational program for the program as a whole and will help us root in tools of self-compassion and mindfulness that will carry us throughout the year.

You can also join in for the Selfie Compassion class on it’s own and find out more about it here!

While both of these were created with folks who’ve taken the original Be Your Own Beloved class, you don’t have to be alumni to join in! Though the original class is definitely something to be experienced so if you haven’t joined in yet, there is a new session coming up in February and you can sign up here!

If you have any questions about the classes (especially if you’re really nervous about taking a class but something is drawing you to none the less) don’t hesitate to connect with me via the contact form! These classes are naturally going to be outside our comfort zone and that’s who I created the for…the classes are designed to help us stand in our power, to see our own beauty, to cultivate our own voice about how we feel about ourselves and our body and that is all vulnerable work but that’s what makes it so transformative too!

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