
Self Love Is Listening
Self Love Is Listening
For a long time, I thought self love meant doing more.
More effort.
More discipline.
More resilience.
I believed that if I could manage things better, push a little harder, or stay more positive, I would feel steadier in my body. Living with autoimmune disease had other plans.
What my body taught me, slowly and sometimes unwillingly, is this.
Self love is listening.
Not once.
Not perfectly.
But consistently and without judgment.
I remember the first time I chose to listen instead of push. Nothing dramatic happened. I did not feel proud or empowered. I felt uncomfortable. I canceled plans. I rested earlier than I thought I should. I questioned myself the entire time.
But afterward, I noticed something important.
My body did not crash the way it usually did.
That was new.
Listening to your body often looks quiet from the outside.
It looks like pausing when you want to power through.
It looks like adjusting plans instead of forcing yourself to follow through.
It looks like admitting something feels like too much, even when you cannot explain why.
This kind of self love does not always feel kind in the moment, especially for women who are used to being dependable, capable, and strong.
For years, I believed strength meant overriding discomfort. Autoimmune disease taught me that strength sometimes looks like responding sooner.
Self love is not about pushing harder.
It is about listening earlier.
Listening before exhaustion takes over.
Listening before pain escalates.
Listening before stress turns into a flare.
In an autoimmune body, ignoring signals does not make them disappear. It only makes them louder.
Listening is not weakness.
It is care.
It is choosing to respond instead of react.
It is trusting that your body is communicating, not failing.
It is learning how to live well in the body you have now, not the one you wish you had.
Self love does not require perfection.
It requires honesty.
And sometimes the most loving thing you can do is pause and ask yourself what you need right now, and then allow that answer to matter.
February was never meant to rush you forward.
It was meant to help you notice.
Because when you listen to your body with care, you stop fighting yourself.
You begin living with yourself.
And that is where real self love begins.
A Gentle Invitation
If this resonated, you do not need to turn it into action right away.
You might simply notice where your body asks for kindness and how often you override it. Awareness is enough.
If community feels supportive, you are welcome inside my free Facebook page, Autoimmune Women: Life After Diagnosis. It is a space for real conversations, shared experiences, and gentle support from women who understand what listening to your body actually requires.
👉 You are welcome to join the free Facebook page here:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/1082010256396779/
And if you would rather start with a conversation, I offer Hello Calls through Calendly. It is simply a place to talk things through, ask questions, and be heard. There is no pressure, no fixing, and no expectations.
👉 If a conversation feels right, you can book a Hello Call here:
https://calendly.com/annmarie-entner2/45
No pressure. No expectations.
Just space to listen, notice, and move at your own pace.
Self love is not something you earn.
It is something you practice by listening.
