Hedonic self-care involves activities that we find pleasurable. A massage or a nap or time spent with dear friends.
Eudaimonic self-care includes those things we do not necessarily because they are pleasurable in the moment, but because they support our goals and objectives. Things like getting our teeth cleaned, or doing meal prep ahead of a busy week, or spending time and money on a therapist or hiring a health coach.
You could easily get the impression that eudaimonic self-care is better or more virtuous than hedonic self-care. But this is not the case. And I don’t want you to forsake hedonic self-care as lesser than.
Continue reading “If it feels good, it must be bad for me…and other fairy tales”