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If things are going well for you, if you are
satisfied with the present pattern of your life and not
particularly interested in making changes at the moment,
good for you. Keep it up. These guidelines are for those who
are already interested in making some gentle changes.
Remember that the advice that follows has proved useful for
some people. They are ideas to try, not commandments. The
goal-setting exercise that accompanies this article is just
that--an exercise. It gives you an opportunity to define and
state a commitment you would like to make to yourself. Think
of it as an opportunity to "try on" some new behavior
patterns. You are free to go back and revise your goals at
any time.

Guideline One: Pick a Goal That Turns You On
Build on strengths. Cultivate excitement. Starve problems
and feed solutions. If you are a smoker and the idea of a
regular running program appeals to you, you might find
yourself quitting cigarettes about the time you get up to
three or four miles a day. If you have a problem with weight
control, and you've always been intrigued by meditation, a
daily meditation session might be more useful than a whole
stack of diet books. Goals that enrich your life are usually
more successful--and are certainly a lot more fun--than
goals that deprive you of something.
Guideline Two: Start by Just Paying Attention
An excellent way to start an exercise program is to buy a
pedometer--a small, watch-sized instrument that hangs from
your belt and records the number of steps you take
(available from running, sporting goods, and backpacking
stores and chart the total miles you walk each day. A good
way to start an eating program is to write down everything
you eat for a period of time. To start a smoking program,
write down where, when and why you smoke each cigarette. Pay
close attention to the ways that other people support
desired or undesired behavior in the area you have chosen.
Do family members insist on offering you high-calorie
goodies? Does everyone else at work light up right after
lunch? Don't try to change anything yet, just pay attention.
Guideline Three: Check Out Your Available Resources
Start with your own personal resources. Were you an athlete
in high school? If so, maybe you can reconnect with some of
the habits and practices that kept you in shape back then.
Do you love to cook? Maybe you would enjoy developing some
nutritious natural-food recipes. Is there a musical
instrument or an art or craft that once meant a lot to you?
Reconnecting with these areas of interest might be a way to
further your own process of self-integration. Have you
always had a dream of being a dancer? A painter? A writer?
This may be an opportunity to develop these interests. What
individuals and groups in your community would be the best
resources in your chosen area? Who already knows about what
you want to know? Do you have friends who have lost weight,
who are runners, mediators or whatever? What are the best
publications in the area you have chosen?
Guideline Four: Brainstorm Many Possible Goals Before
Narrowing It Down to One
If you want to start an exercise program, you might start by
brainstorming such goals as running a marathon, running five
miles a day, joining (or organizing) a weekly fun-run or
running support group, running in place for five minutes
before your shower each morning, taking the stairs instead
of the elevator, or taking a fifteen-minute walk after lunch
three times a week. Be creative. Feel free to be completely
unrealistic. Think of goals that would be fun. Remember you
are just brainstorming. Find your own way to do it. Maybe
the best way for you to start an exercise program would be
to get a dog and take it for a walk once or twice a day.

Guideline Five: Design Freedom Into Your Goals
"I will allow myself to take work breaks to do yoga whenever
I feel like it." "I will go to bed early in order to give
myself some quiet time in the morning before breakfast."
"When I go running, I will let myself dance, skip, stop to
look at a bird or a flower, or do anything I feel like."
These are some goals with built-in freedom.
Guideline Six: Support Yourself
Pay close attention to your successes and the benefits
deriving from your new practices. Celebrate your victories.
"I ran a whole half-mile today without stopping!" "Doing
yoga sure makes my back and shoulders feel good." Think of
rewards you might give yourself for reaching short-term and
long-term goals. (A hot bath after an evening run, a massage
after logging your first hundred miles, dinner and a movie
after completing a pet creative project.)
Guideline Seven: Ask the Support of Others-And Support
Them for Supporting You
Pick your support person (or people) carefully. Pick people
who accept you as you are, who make you feel good about
yourself when you are with them. Tell them that you're
working on developing your own self-care plan and ask if
they'd be willing to be your support person for the goal
you've chosen. Tell them the kinds of things they could do
to help support you. Be as specific as you can, for example,
"Serve me smaller portions." "Bicycle along with me
sometimes when I go running."

Guideline Eight: Create a Supportive Environment
It may be easier to change your environment than to change
your behaviour. The easiest way to control your choice of
foods is at the place you buy your food. If you have
high-calorie, low-nutrition foods around, they'll probably
end up eating that. What goes into your shopping cart goes
into your family's bodies. If you're trying to cut down on
caffeine, try mixing your present brand of coffee
half-and-half with decaffeinated coffee. Trouble overeating?
Put your scale next to your refrigerator. And if your new,
smaller portions look too tiny, buy smaller plates. If
you're exploring yoga, massage, or meditation, try putting
aside a special part of the house--or a special room--for
these practices. Does soaking in hot water help you relax?
Consider putting in a bigger bathtub. Having trouble finding
a good place to run? Join other runners.
Guideline Nine: Be Aware of Feedback and Be Open to
Modifying Your Goal
How does your new practice make your body feel? How does
your awareness change? If you have a cold and are reading
about the physiology of colds and taking vitamin C, how does
that feel, compared to the way you used to cope with colds?
How does making certain changes in your diet affect the way
you feel about mealtime? At what times of day do you find
yourself using your new relaxation skills?
Be aware of negative feedback, too. If you've given a chosen
practice a good try and it's just not working, give yourself
a vacation and re-evaluate. Are you trying for too much too
fast? Go back to the paying attention and brainstorming
stage. You haven't failed; you've gained some useful
information. Go back through the goal-setting exercise. Or,
if it seems right, give yourself a vacation from
goal-setting for a while.

Guideline Ten: Remember That Your
Ultimate Goal Is to Discover Practices That Allow You to
Experience and Develop Your Own Uniqueness
There are two approaches to developing a self-care plan.
Method number one is to imagine the ideal way you think you
should be or would like to be. You then focus your attention
on all the ways you fail to live up to that ideal. This
method is a very effective way of making yourself miserable.
Method number two is to begin by just testing your own
being, becoming aware of your own body without comparing it
to anything or anyone. When you taste a good wine, if you
are comparing it to another wine or to how an ideal wine
would taste, you will not be able to fully taste the wine
you are drinking. If you are reading, a book or watching a
movie and are too involved in criticizing the plot or
analyzing the style, chances are you won't be able to enjoy
the story.
It may be that the most important part of developing a
self-care plan is not the things you start doing, but the
things you stop doing, a sort of psychological
housecleaning, getting rid of some things you don't need any
more. So, Best of Luck in working toward your own
tailor-made self-care plan, and remember that it is you who
must be the tailor.
Worksheet for Developing a Personal Self-Care Plan
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My main area of interest (eating,
exercise, learning to deal with common illness problems,
etc.)
-
My main personal strengths and
resources in this area
-
The best resources for me in this
area (people, groups, classes, books, etc.)
-
Some activities and goals I might
choose to help me explore this area (Brainstorm!)
-
I would like to choose an initial
activity that I could complete in about
days/weeks/months.
-
Within this time limit, the goal I
would most like to set for myself is
-
Some small rewards I will give myself
for making progress toward this goal
-
A big reward I will give myself for
reaching my goal
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I will ask to be my support person in
working toward this goal
-
I will contact my support person on
(date) to bring him/her up to date on my explorations in
this area.
-
My commitment, again, is to
accomplish the following activities: between now and the
following date
-
On that date, I will give my support
person a report on my explorations in this area.
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