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Developing Healthy Self-Awareness

Muriel Akahi

Created on November 27, 2025

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Transcript

Developing Healthy Self-Awareness

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A quick note

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What is healthy self-awareness?

Healthy self-awareness is the harmony between:

And the perceived self
The real self
The ideal self
Who you truly are.
How you think others see you.
Who you want to become.

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When these three parts of the self are close to each other, you experience congruence — a state of inner alignment. When they’re too far apart, you feel tension, confusion, or a sense of being inauthentic. Healthy self-awareness is when you no longer feel the need to hide — even from yourself.

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The pillars of balanced self-awareness

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Self-observation without self-judgement

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Kindness towards yourself

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Constructive Reflection

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Acceptance of Change

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Alignment with your values

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The Benefits of Healthy Self-Swareness

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The more you learn to understand yourself, the more you can choose how you want to live.

Spiritual / Identity

Emotional

Social

School / Work

Real benefit: Sense of unity and meaning. Why: Alignment between your values and your actions.

Real benefit: More authentic relationships. Why: Clear communication and empathy.

Real benefit: Less stress, more calm. Why: Better emotional regulation.

Real benefit: Increased motivation and confidence. Why: Stronger sense of self-efficacy.

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Regular Practices to Strengthen Your Self-Awareness

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Daily Reflection Journal

Write three short sentences each day:

“What I learnt about myself today…”

“What I’ll do differently tomorrow…”

“What I felt today…”

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Constructive Feedbacks

Ask people you trust:

“How do you see me when I’m stressed / excited / sad?”

“What do you notice about me when I’m doubting myself or when I’m full of energy?”

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Moments of silence and introspection

Take 5 minutes each day without music or your phone — just to listen to your inner world.

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Your Body as an Indicator

Notice your body’s signals: tension, warmth, heartbeat. Your body speaks to you — listen to it closely.

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In Summary

Healthy self-awareness is built on observing yourself without self-judgement, practising kindness, reflecting constructively, accepting change, and staying aligned with your values. It helps you understand yourself with clarity and accept yourself with gentleness.

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Activities to Check Understanding

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Well done!

You have completed this exploration of self-awareness.

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Also called regulatory self-reflection, it means analysing your behaviour not to judge yourself, but to understand and adjust. The goal isn’t to blame yourself for mistakes, but to turn them into a lesson in clarity. Example: → ‘I reacted badly.’ → ‘What unmet need does this reveal? What could I do differently next time?’

This is the foundation of all self-awareness: the ability to notice what’s happening inside you without criticising yourself or running away from it. ‘I feel angry’ ≠ ‘I’m an angry person.’ This mindset helps you break free from self-criticism and become a witness to your inner states. It’s the essential first step that allows you to choose your response instead of being controlled by it.

Healthy self-awareness includes the ability to grow without losing yourself. People who adopt a growth mindset see their limits not as signs of failure, but as starting points. You’re not fixed — you’re becoming the person you’re meant to be.

Research in motivational psychology shows that self-awareness reaches its full potential when your actions reflect your core values. Being aligned means that what you think, feel, and do all tell the same story. In practice: • List your five most important values. • Notice whether your schedule reflects them. • If not, choose one simple action to restore that alignment.

Also known as self-compassion, it’s the ability to treat yourself the way you would treat a friend — with understanding, patience, and encouragement. Research shows that it: • Lowers anxiety and shame. • Increases resilience and motivation. • Supports better mental health. Being kind to yourself doesn’t mean making excuses — it means accepting your humanity.