If You Won’t Do It For Yourself
You’ve heard the advice before: choose yourself; put on your own oxygen mask first. It sounds rational, but when you try to apply it, another voice cuts in. It calls this work what you secretly fear it is: selfish.
Perhaps for you, value is measured by what you give. Your purpose is tied to the support you provide, the needs you meet, the roles you carry for others. Turning that energy inward feels like abandoning your post.
Who will hold everything together if you don’t?
But here is the truth: tending to yourself is not abandonment. It is the only way you stay reliable. It is the difference between someone who burns out and disappears, and someone who remains steady, present, and trustworthy.
What looks like selfishness in personal life is the same trick institutions use to turn exhaustion into obligation.
Refusing depletion—whether as a worker, a parent, or a citizen—is not betrayal. It is a refusal to let that machine define your worth.
Freeing Others Prepares You to Free Yourself
It can be easier to begin with other people’s stories. When you explain why a relationship ended, or when you reframe someone’s betrayal as a delay instead of a ruin, you’re not just helping them—you’re rehearsing tools you’ll need for yourself.
You learn to spot patterns. Pain that once felt vague becomes precise: not “I was unworthy,” but “they could not grow with me.”
You learn that stories are not fixed. Meaning is always open to reframe, and you have authority to decide what the story will mean.
You learn that anger has a target. The energy you cast outward eventually points back to where you abandoned yourself.
Try this: Think of one past commitment or relationship that still weighs on you. Identify the pattern that made it collapse—not just the hurt, but the mechanism. Ask: what lesson did it leave behind?
Each time you do this, you practice liberation. Every outward explanation is training to one day turn that clarity inward.
Freeing Yourself Strengthens Your Capacity
The deeper shift comes when you begin with yourself. Then you are no longer practicing—you are applying.
You become consistent. Rest and boundaries don’t weaken you; they make you predictable and dependable.
You make your support clean. A reluctant “yes” erodes trust. A clear “yes” given from capacity strengthens it.
You stop teaching dependency on your depletion. When you overextend, others learn to lean on your collapse. When you honor limits, you model how they can hold themselves.
Try this: Notice one place where your “yes” has become reluctant. Replace it with a “no.” Then watch how your next “yes” carries more weight.
This is not indulgence. It is basic maintenance. It is how you ensure you will still be here tomorrow.
Self-Work Is Service
Whether you start outward or inward, the result is the same: the skill transfers.
The real question was never, Do I choose myself or others? That has always been a false choice. The truth is sharper: you choose yourself in order to choose others better.
Try this: Identify one place where you’ve been straining like a lifeline—pulling beyond capacity, afraid to let go. Ask: what would it look like to shift into steadiness there—visible, dependable, sustainable, without breaking yourself in the process?
Do the work. Set the boundary. Take the rest. Recalibrate when the warning signs appear. This is not selfishness. It is duty.
If you won’t do it for yourself, then do it for them. Because the people you love don’t need your sacrifice. They need your steadiness. They don’t need a burnt-out lifeline. They need a consistent signal they can rely on.
And if you want the structural parallel: the same principle applies at scale. Universal systems—housing, healthcare, education—flip incentives away from depletion. As I’ve argued in Universality Disincentivizes Surveillance, building for durability protects everyone better than extracting until collapse.
Self-work is not just a matter of survival. It is rehearsal for how we design systems that last.
If depletion is treated as duty, collapse is inevitable.
If durability is treated as duty, care becomes sustainable—for you, and for everyone who depends on you.