Affirmations 7/10
The mirror, the
first time.
You’re in front of the bathroom mirror. Hair not done. Coffee not made yet. Maybe still in what you slept in. The light isn’t flattering and you haven’t quite committed to being awake.
You look at yourself.
The instructions said: speak the affirmations aloud. In your own voice. Looking at yourself.
I am worthy of love.
It comes out quiet. Half-mumbled. Your face does that thing where it can’t quite hold the sentence. The voice in the back of your head laughs.
You try again. Same.
You feel ridiculous.
This is the moment most people quit affirmation work forever. They stand in that bathroom, hear themselves not believe it, and decide the whole concept is woo-woo.
Affirmations don’t work by being believed instantly. They work by being said long enough that the gap closes. The first time always feels ridiculous. The hundredth time doesn’t. The thousandth time, the words and the feeling are the same thing.
The voice in the mirror was always going to argue with you the first time.
The work isn’t proving the affirmation true on day one. The work is showing up on day two. And day three. And the morning after the morning where it sounded the most ridiculous. That’s where becoming actually happens.