Love Yourself Like Your Life Depends On It cover

Love Yourself Like Your Life Depends On It

by Kamal Ravikant

Self-Help
BOOK INFOGRAPHIC Love Yourself Like Your Life Depends O by Kamal Ravikant TL;DR Pulled from the depths of depression by a single vow -- 'Iwill love myself'. KEY THEMES MindsetHappinessResilienceSelf-Awareness 7 min read 6 sections Anyone battling... Darkness is the absence of light. If you remember this, itwill change your life.

The Book in Three Sentences

The Five Big Ideas

Love Yourself Like Your Life Depends On It Summary

James Altucher writes, “I don’t do a post now unless I’m worried about what people will think about me.” (Further reading:Choose Yourself.)

In simplicity lies truth. In simplicity lies power.

Loving yourself is a daily practice.

Kamal was in a bad way. He was miserable out of his mind and there were days where he would lay in bed, too depressed to even open the drapes. One day he hit his “emotional threshold,” got out of bed and wrote himself the following:

“This day, I vow to myself to love myself, to treat myself as someone I love truly and deeply—in my thoughts, my actions, the choices I make, the experiences I have, each moment I am conscious, I make the decision I LOVE MYSELF.”

(Note: For more on emotional thresholds, readAwaken the Giant Withinby Tony Robbins)

Kamel didn’t know how to love himself. All he knew was that he’d made a vow—something far greater than a commitment, bigger than an I-wish or a nice-to-have.  A vow.

Kamal didn’t believe he loved himself in the beginning. But what mattered more was he was committing to the practice and in the simplest way, he could think of: focusing on one thought repeatedly until it was more top of mind.

“Imagine the feeling of catching yourself loving yourself without trying. It’s like catching a sunset out of the corner of your eye. It will stop you.”

The Practice

It doesn’t matter if you don’t love or even like yourself—it’s okay to build up to it.

“Darkness is the absence of light. If you remember this, it will change your life.”

“Any negative thought is darkness.”

“Imagine you’re in a dark room and it’s bright outside.  Your job is to go to the window, pull out a rag, and start cleaning. Just clean. And soon enough, light enters naturally, taking the darkness away. It’s that simple.  Each time the mind shifts to darkness—fear, worry, pain, you name it—when you notice, clean the window. Light will flow in.”

1. Mental Loop

We run familiar patterns and loops in our heads. When we replay these loops, they trigger feelings. It’s automatic to the point where we believe we don’t have a choice. But we do.

Kamal compares a thought loop to a groove in a rock created by water:

“If you had a thought once, it has no power over you. Repeat it again and again, especially with emotional intensity, feeling it, and over time, you’re creating the grooves, the mental river. Then it controls you.”

“Take this one thought: I love myself. Add emotional intensity if you can—it deepens the groove faster than anything. Feel the thought. Run it again and again. Feel it. Run it. Whether you believe it or not doesn’t matter, just focus on this one thought. Make it your truth.”

2. A Meditation

Kamal meditates for seven minutes every day.

In his own words,

I sit with my back against a wall, put on my headphones, listen to the music, and imagine galaxies and stars and the Universe above, and I imagine all the light from space flowing into my head and down into my body, going wherever it needs to go. I breathe slowly, naturally. As I inhale, I think, I love myself. Then I exhale and let out whatever the response in my mind and body is, whether there is one or not. That’s it.  Simple.

I sit with my back against a wall, put on my headphones, listen to the music, and imagine galaxies and stars and the Universe above, and I imagine all the light from space flowing into my head and down into my body, going wherever it needs to go. I breathe slowly, naturally. As I inhale, I think, I love myself. Then I exhale and let out whatever the response in my mind and body is, whether there is one or not. That’s it.  Simple.

How to Meditate

3. One Question

On dealing with others and reacting to their negative emotions with his own:

“I ask myself, ‘If I loved myself truly and deeply, would I let myself experience this?’”

The answer to the above is always no.

Rather than solving the emotion or trying not to feel it, Kamal will just return to the one true thing in his head, “I love myself, I love myself, I love myself.”

“Here we are, thinking that one needs to be in love with another to shine, to feel free and shout from the rooftops, but the most important person, the most important relationship we’ll ever have is waiting, is craving to be loved truly and deeply.”

“Beautiful irony. Fall in love with yourself. Let your love express itself and the world will beat a path to your door to fall in love with you.”

Another Meditation

When life goes well for a while it’s easy to believe it’ll stay that way (it won’t). And when you believe that, you become complacent. Your practice becomes something you assume rather than something you work on. You stop truly loving yourself. Kamal calls this “coasting”.

If you begin to coast, ask yourself, “If I loved myself, truly and deeply, what would I do?”

“The goal, if there is one, is to practice until the thought you chose becomes the primary loop. Until it becomes the filter through which you view life.”

“Real growth comes through intense, difficult, and challenging situations.”

“What we believe, that’s what we seek, it’s the filter we view our lives through.”

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