The Day I Chose Myself And What It Taught Me

The journey of self-improvement is often anything but linear. It’s winding, unpredictable, and deeply personal. When I first stepped onto the path of self-development, I found myself overwhelmed by the sheer volume of information—countless ideologies, frameworks, and philosophies, each promising healing, transformation, and inner peace.

Some of it was profound. Some of it was performative. I devoured it all anyway.

From academic research and professional training to blog posts and YouTube deep dives, I became an enthusiastic student of personal growth. But over time—nearly a decade, in fact—what really stuck with me wasn’t any one method or guru’s advice. It was the simple but radical idea of choosing myself, every single day.

And let me be clear: choosing myself did not come naturally.

For years, self-betrayal felt like second nature. I knew what was best for me—my mind made that loud and clear—but something always stopped me from acting on it. Guilt. Conditioning. Fear. It took years of fumbling forward to learn how to replace that habit with one that actually honored my potential.

Here are the four ways I’ve learned to choose myself—consistently, imperfectly, and with love.

1. I choose myself by learning and re-learning my happiness equation.

At some point, I stopped assuming happiness was something I’d stumble upon. Instead, I started treating it like an equation—specific elements that, when combined, made me feel aligned and whole.

For me, those ingredients include creativity (as both an artist and a writer), movement in nature, a clean living space, regular meditation, and hydration. These aren’t extravagant or revolutionary, but they’re essential to my well-being. They sustain me far more than fleeting joys like dessert or a flirty text ever could.

And like any good equation, mine changes over time. What once lit me up may not always work. That’s why I journal. That’s why I sit quietly in meditation. That’s why I ask myself, often, what do I need now?

This self-awareness has become a compass. It brings me home when the world gets loud.

2. I choose myself by practicing discipline—gently but firmly.

This one took the longest. For years, I resisted discipline, equating it with rigidity and repression. I feared it would suffocate my creativity. But eventually, I realized discipline wasn’t my enemy—it was my anchor.

Being disciplined allows me to keep promises to myself. It turns intention into action. It builds self-trust, which, for someone who once chronically self-abandoned, is everything.

And here’s the best part: the rewards compound. A day of discipline becomes a week. A week becomes a month. Suddenly, I look around and see the proof—calmer mornings, clearer thoughts, stronger boundaries. Not because I forced myself, but because I cared enough to follow through.

Discipline, I’ve learned, is a love language too.

3. I choose myself by honoring the past, without living in it.

My childhood wasn’t easy. And in my early 20s, I realized that if I didn’t confront it, I’d be doomed to repeat it—subconsciously playing out old patterns I didn’t even realize I’d inherited.

So I went deep. Therapy, inner child work, reparenting. I did the bulk of my healing. But triggers still come. Memories still surface. And the challenge now is: how long do I stay with them?

Sometimes the answer is five minutes. Sometimes it’s a week of reflection. What matters most is that I stay intuitive and compassionate with myself, while also staying grounded in the present. The goal is no longer to fix the past—but to ensure it doesn’t rob me of the future.

4. I choose myself by being rooted in who I am—regardless of what happens around me.

This is my most recent (and maybe most liberating) practice: refusing to let the world define me.

My identity is not my job title. It’s not my productivity. It’s not whether someone likes me, or how many clients I book, or how much money I make in a month.

For a long time, I measured my worth through performance and validation. But now? Now I build self-assurance from the inside. So when things go wrong, I don’t spiral. When things go beautifully, I savor it without needing to cling.

Life is unpredictable. But I don’t have to be.

Choosing myself—daily, actively, wholeheartedly—has become the greatest act of self-love I’ve ever known. And it’s something I’ll keep learning to do better, again and again.

If you’re in the middle of your own journey, I hope this gives you a map. Or at least a starting point.

And if nothing else, let this truth land gently on your heart: you are allowed to be the main character in your own life. You’re allowed to choose yourself—not once, but always.

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