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Self-Compassion In A Relationship (Positives & Pitfalls)

Plus: do you know which supplements you shouldn't take together? (10 pairs!)

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Happy September! Time to get going with any new healthy habits for the new month—or a revitalization of habits that we perhaps let slip during summer!

In A Rush?

Today’s 30-Second Summary

If you don’t have time to read the whole email today, here are some key takeaways:

  • Self-compassion is as important in a relationship as it is in life in general. However, there are pitfalls!

    • Today’s main feature examines what can go wrong, how we can do better, and how to ensure that both ours and our partner’s needs are taken care of.

  • Hair loss affects many people from a certain age onwards, but it doesn’t have to be that way.

    • Today’s sponsor Hims is offering well-evidenced hair-loss remedies direct to your door, with minoxidil and finasteride as active ingredients. Check them out!

  • Today’s featured recipe is for a healthy choco-banoffee ice cream (yes, really!)

Read on to learn more about these things, or click here to visit our archive

A Word To The Wise

Zuranolone

What to know about the pill for post-partum depression:

Watch and Learn

Do You Know Which Supplements You Shouldn’t Take Together? (10 Pairs!)

Dr. LeGrand Peterson wants us to get the most out of our supplements, so watch out for these:

Prefer text? The above video will take you to a 10almonds page with a text-overview, as well as the video!

Psychology Sunday

Practise Self-Compassion In Your Relationship (But Watch Out!)

Let’s make clear up-front: this is not about “…but not too much”.

With that in mind…

Now let’s set the scene: you, a happily-partnered person, have inadvertently erred and upset your partner. They may or may not have already forgiven you, but you are still angry at yourself.

Likely next steps include all or any of:

  • continuing to apologise and try to explain

  • self-deprecatory diatribes

  • self-flagellation, probably not literally but in the sense of “I don’t deserve…” and acting on that feeling

  • self-removal, because you don’t want to further inflict your bad self on your partner

As you might guess, these are quite varied in their degree of healthiness:

  • apologising is good, as even is explaining, but once it’s done, it’s done; let it go

  • self-deprecation is pretty much never useful, let alone healthy

  • self-flagellation likewise; it is not only inherently self-destructive, but will likely create an additional problem for your partner too

  • self-removal can be good or bad depending on the manner of that removal: there’s a difference between just going cold and distant on your partner, and saying “I’m sorry; this is my fault not yours, I don’t want to take it out on you, so please give me half an hour by myself to regain my composure, and I will come back with love then if that’s ok with you”

About that last: mentioning the specific timeframe e.g. “half an hour” is critical, by the way—don’t leave your partner hanging! And then do also follow through on that; come back with love after the half-hour elapses. We suggest mindfulness meditation in the interim (here’s our guide to how), if you’re not sure what to do to get you there.

To Err Is Human; To Forgive, Healthy (Here’s How To Do It) ← this goes for when the forgiveness in question is for yourself, too—and we do write about that there (and how)!

This is important, by the way; not forgiving yourself can cause more serious issues down the line:

If, by the way, you’re hand-wringing over “but was my apology good enough really, or should I…” then here is how to do it. Basically, do this, and then draw a line under it and consider it done:

The Apology Checklist ← you’ll want to keep a copy of this, perhaps in the notes app on your phone, or a screenshot if you prefer

(the checklist is at the bottom of that page)

The catch

It’s you, you’re the catch 👈👈😎

Ok, that being said, there is actually a catch in the less cheery sense of the word, and it is:

“It is important to be compassionate about one’s occasional failings in a relationship” does not mean “It is healthy to be neglectful of one’s partner’s emotional needs; that’s self-care, looking after #1; let them take care of themself too”

…because that’s simply not being a couple at all.

Think about it this way: the famous airline advice,

“Put on your own oxygen mask before helping others with theirs”

…does not mean “Put on your own oxygen mask and then watch those kids suffocate; it’s everyone for themself”

So, the same goes in relationships too. And, as ever, we have science for this. There was a recent (2024) study, involving hundreds of heterosexual couples aged 18–73, which looked at two things, each measured with a scaled questionnaire:

  • Subjective levels of self-compassion

  • Subjective levels of relationship satisfaction

For example, questions included asking participants to rate, from 1–5 depending on how much they felt the statements described them, e.g:

In my relationship with my partner, I:

  • treat myself kindly when I experience sorrow and suffering.

  • accept my faults and weaknesses.

  • try to see my mistakes as part of human nature.

  • see difficulties as part of every relationship that everyone goes through once.

  • try to get a balanced view of the situation when something unpleasant happens.

  • try to keep my feelings in balance when something upsets me.

Note: that’s not multiple choice! It’s asking participants to rate each response as applicable or not to them, on a scale of 1–5.

And…

❝Women's self-compassion was also positively linked with men's total relationship satisfaction. Thus, men seem to experience overall satisfaction with the relationship when their female partner is self-kind and self-caring in difficult situations.

Unexpectedly, however, we found that men's relationship-specific self-compassion was negatively associated with women's fulfillment.

Baker and McNulty (2011) reported that, only for men, a Self-Compassion x Conscientiousness interaction explained whether the positive effects of self-compassion on the relationship emerged, but such an interaction was not found for women.

Highly self-compassionate men who were low in conscientiousness were less motivated than others to remedy interpersonal mistakes in their romantic relationships, and this tendency was in turn related to lower relationship satisfaction❞

~ Dr. Astrid Schütz et al. (2024)

And if you’d like to read the cited older paper from 2011, here it is:

The take-away here is not: “men should not practice self-compassion”

(rather, they absolutely should)

The take-away is: we must each take responsibility for managing our own mood as best we are able; practice self-forgiveness where applicable and forgive our partner where applicable (and communicate that!)…. And then go consciously back to the mutual care on which the relationship is hopefully founded.

Which doesn’t just mean love-bombing, by the way, it also means listening:

To close… We say this often, but we mean it every time: take care!

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This Or That?

Vote on Which is Healthier

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Now for today’s choice:

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Recipes Worth Sharing

Healthy Choco-Banoffee Ice Cream

Chocolate, banana, and coffee—quite a threesome, whether for breakfast or dessert, and this is healthy enough for breakfast while being decadent enough for dessert! With no dairy or added sugar, and lots of antioxidants, this is a healthy way to start or end your day:

Click below for our full recipe, and learn its secrets:

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Wishing you a peaceful Sunday,

The 10almonds Team