Is it OK to feel sorry for yourself?

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I’ve always been a fan of John Denver (the music, more than the moppy-haired-man).  Perhaps it’s because I have a fair bit of farming in my family tree, or just because I’m a back-to-nature kinda gal when possible.  His songs ‘Rocky Mountain High’ and ‘Take Me Home Country Road’ are favorites. 

John’s song ‘Sweet Surrender’ has some great lyrics: “Lost and alone on some forgotten highway / Travelled by many remembered by few / Lookin’ for something that I can believe in / Lookin’ for something that I’d like to do with my life”.  (Although, truth be told, the same song also has some more iffy lyrics: “Sweet, sweet surrender / Live, live without care / Like a fish in the water / Like a bird in the air”… it’s not overly profound given that fish HAVE to live in the water, with or without care.) 

Perhaps the greatest sign of my affection is that I slow-danced to ‘Annie’s Song’ at my wedding (I love the lyrics but always felt a little cringey that I was dancing to someone else’s song).

Anyway. When no one else is around, I have been known to listen to my 3-CD-box set “Legendary” back-to-back.  Of the 50 songs, most of them make me smile, but there’s one that always gets under my skin; “I’m Sorry”.  As the title suggests, the song is an apology to a lover who’s up and left him.  The song includes lyrics such as “I’m sorry for all the lies I told you / I’m sorry for the things I didn’t say” and “I’m sorry if I took some things for granted / I’m sorry for the chains I put on you”.  Not totally terrible.  Seems sincere.  (Also makes you understand why she probably left). The problem is that after each of these apologies comes different variations of the line “More than anything else, I’m sorry for myself / For livin’ without you”.  In writing it doesn’t look super-bad, but in the song, due to the tempo of the backing music, it comes out “More than anything else, I’m sorry for my-se-eh-eh-elf…… For livin’ without you.”  The long drawn out, protracted version of “myself” combined with the long pause before he (sort of) qualifies his sadness to be about her, undermines the message in my opinion – sorry, not sorry, John.

If someone gave me an apology that went along the lines of “I’m sorry for this, that, and the other, but mostly I’m just sorry for myself”, I’m not sure whether I’d laugh or cry.  I am fairly certain, however, that I would not feel overly forgiving.

It got me thinking – what are the rules about feeling sorry for yourself? 

At some point, or several, life is bound to leave us feeling cheated, defeated, frustrated, unexpectedly lonely or sad, in chronic pain, or just world weary.  I think it’s totally normal to have negative feelings, and moreover, it’s totally normal that they sometimes combine to leave you feeling sorry for yourself. 

What I also suspect, however, is that, like the song, pause and protraction are not great.

Feeling sorry for yourself is A-OK.  Feeling sorry for yourself for a long period of time, to the extent that all other emotions are put on hold, is probably not so OK.  Feeling sorry for yourself to the extent that your sorrow always overrides everyone else’s feelings (good or bad) is even more concerning. 

That said, I often feel sorry for myself.  I often think: “Life is so unfair”, “Why is this happening to me?”, “I’m tired of pretending that everything is OK”, “Why is everyone else’s life so much easier than mine?” and “I’m sick and tired of feeling sick and tired”…

Chronic pain ‘stole’ a lot from me, including joy, time, even a sense of myself, which I’m only now beginning to restore.  That said, I’d be disappointed if self-pity overtook me for so long that I couldn’t notice anyone else’s pain (although as I write this, I realize I undoubtedly did do this during my sickest times).

I guess I’m not really sure how to advise you on how to reign back self-pity other than to caution you to be aware of it. Indulge, by all means, just not all the time.

Feel sorry for yourself.  Just, maybe, don’t feel sorry for your-se-eh-eh-elf, if you know what I mean.

Take care, Linda x

[PS – here’s a video of John singing “I’m Sorry” when he was on tour in Australia. It’s a slightly different version to the one on my CD and makes it seem like I might be reading too much into a teeny-tiny-pause…]


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9 responses to “Is it OK to feel sorry for yourself?”

  1. thingsihavethoughtof Avatar

    Yeah, I suppose our ‘cultural heritage’ from England was that old stiff upper lip, but I suppose it keeps us from being too flaky and just keep going. Good for the economy, which is what it’s all about right;-)

    It does make you wonder whether unresolved stresses you accumulate and push down into the nether regions of your consciousness will eventually do something sinister to you. Need to untie that Gordian knot.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. thingsihavethoughtof Avatar

      oh, wrong spot, should be in reply to our other posts!

      Liked by 2 people

      1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

        No stress – I know where you’re coming from, and where you’re supposed to be at!

        Cool reference to ‘the knot’ – I haven’t thought about that for a long time – but you might have just provided me with an inroad to something I was trying to introduce at university!

        Thank you!!
        xox

        Liked by 2 people

  2. joannerambling Avatar

    Nothing wrong with feeling sorry for ones self from time to time it is part of living, just don’t wallow in self pity that isn’t good. 

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Well put 🙃🙂

      Like

  3. Afrodite Chris Avatar

    My favorite song from Denver is Country Roads and I have to admit that this musician can fill you with strong emotions. Your topic is so meaningful dear. I think It’s ok when we sometimes feel sorry for ourselves. The most important though, is to keep going, learning from our difficulties and not letting self-pity destroy our entire lives.
    Kisses and hugs dear 🤗

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Thank you lovely, I agree; everything in moderation. Glad to have found a fellow Denver-fan! 🥰

      Liked by 1 person

  4. thingsihavethoughtof Avatar

    My mum was big into John Denver (we’re originally from the mountain country, I was born in Mt. Beauty), she took us to see him at the Myer Music Bowl in Melbourne way back in the 70s, I can hardly remember. Interesting that something she always said to us was ‘stop feeling sorry for yourself’. I wonder if this is where she got it! And I have to say that I don’t really ever feel sorry for myself, it just is, get on with it. Maybe this is because of my mum, who knows.

    The other weird thing I want to mention is that I first listened to this video (the official): https://youtu.be/jIjOAWXZJSI?si=rSWtnuIuWiWs3wwN

    If you listen, it sounds like the final line sounds like ‘forgiven without you’. There definitely seems like a ‘g’ there, but the live video you provided and the lyrics over the internet are all ‘for living without you’. Maybe he copped flack for ‘forgiven’ and changed it. But ‘forgiven’ means he’s forgiven himself for everything that happened, and felt sorry for himself to the point he can finally forgive himself for what happened. So it’s a story about him getting over it. Maybe you do need to feel sorry for yourself for a bit to get over it.

    Or….. maybe I’m reading too much into it. But thanks for your insights again, always fun!

    Liked by 4 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Oh! Another teeny-tiny detail to obsess over! I think I can hear the ‘forgivin’ as opposed to ‘for livin’ in your version, which sounds a lot like the one on my CD.

      Either way, I think you did hit on something really important; feeling sorry for yourself is a stage that we need to pass through to process grief. We lost something, so we feel bad about it, then we pick ourselves up and keep going.

      When I was a kid in Sydney in the 70s “buck up” was the thing most adults told a kid that was sulking, so like you, keeping a stiff upper lift was preferable to feeling sorry for yourself… can’t help but wonder what the long term effects of suppressing those emotions might be…. migraines perhaps?!?

      Thanks as always for reading, I really enjoy your feedback. Linda xox

      Liked by 3 people

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