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Health
Kotryna Br

64 Self-Care Trends That Are Doing A Lot Of Damage, But Many People Don’t Realize It

Self-care is important to our mental, emotional, and physical health. But somewhere down the road, it has become a mere buzzword.

Content creators are teaching us about morning meditation, daily journaling, the ideal bedtime, practicing gratitude, walking, sugar detoxes, caffeine detoxes, digital detoxes—seriously, how many forms of detoxes?—and businesses are selling bath bombs, essential oils, mindfulness apps, fitness trackers, aromatherapy diffusers, weighted blankets, stress-relief candles, ambient sound machines, massage guns…

Don't get me wrong; none of these things are bad per se. It's just that consumerism has taken over what was supposed to be a personal and meaningful habit, and now we're being led to believe that we have to buy into the latest fad if we want to stay well.

So Reddit user Kendraxquinn asked people to list widespread self-care trends that they think are actually toxic. And they responded. Below, you will find some of the most popular entries.

#1

Toxic positivity.

"Your own thinking is the cause for all your hardships. Just think positive and all your problems will go away. If they don't, you're not thinking positive enough."

Congratulations, now people going through true hardships that have no or no easy solutions feel a giant amount of guilt on top of it.

Image credits: onesmilematters

#2

Letting your children do a beauty regime. 9 year olds do not need to exfoliate, use night cream and day serum, and beg their mommie to spend $50 on special face potions and silk pillowcases

Slap some sunscreen and a big hat on them, and keep them the f**k off social media.

Image credits: bugwrench

#3

HAES, "Healthy at every size," has been distorted to mean you're healthy no matter what and that's just not true. Nobody should be fat shamed, but being overweight isn't a healthy choice.

Image credits: Homerpaintbucket

#4

Any kind of “cleanse”. That’s what your liver and kidneys do.

Image credits: gothiclg

#5

Radical selfishness to the point that you don't think you should ever have to compromise, sacrifice, be inconvenienced by, or have an imperfect interaction with someone.

Image credits: St-Nobody

#6

Mistaking things within the normal range of human emotion as mental illness.

You're *supposed* to feel anxious sometimes. Anger, disappointment, sadness? They're all valid emotions you will sometimes feel.

Image credits: lessmiserables

#7

That whole 'hustle culture' thing. It's like society is telling us to burn out for the sake of productivity.

Image credits: AmberHarder

#8

That constant pressure to always look on the bright side and be positive no matter what. A friend of mine "Jessie" went through a really tough time and every time she tried to open up about how she was feeling, people just told her to "stay positive" or "look on the bright side." instead of helping. Sometimes, it's okay to feel down and talk about it because forcing positivity can actually make things worse.

Image credits: Peachy_Sofie

#9

The "how not to give a f**k" nonsense. I agree, don't give a f**k what people think if you enjoy a certain type of music. But do give a f**k about how your actions affect other people. Unfortunately, it seems that many people just take it to mean "don't care that you might hurt other people."

In order to self-care and self-love, it is important to consider what consequences your actions have on the world around you.

Image credits: AGrayishCat

#10

Carbs are not bad for you. Gluten is not bad for you. Calories are not evil. Dairy is not bad for you. Grains are not bad for you. Sugar is not bad for you.

These things BECOME bad for you if a) you're allergic to them or otherwise intolerant, b) it's the only thing you eat, c) it's ultraprocessed and not balanced out with unprocessed foods.

With all this diet culture c**p people have no idea what an actual healthy, balanced diet looks like any more. Eat a mix of foods, mostly unprocessed, and don't punish yourself for indulging in the occasional piece of cake. Hating yourself into better habits does not work.

Image credits: RiskyMama

#11

Mommy wine/booze culture!!! Multiple drinks every night should not be the way you destress and look after yourself!!

Image credits: kellenbee1

#12

"You have to love yourself before someone else will love you." I can say from experience that sometimes you need someone else to love you first. There was a time when my girlfriend saw value in me before I saw it in myself.

#13

Toxic Christianity.. I know far too many country club Christians who use their religious status as a way to never be wrong, to have no integrity because they were “called”, and to go fill up their cup (self care) every Sunday in an expensive outfit to then go treat people like garbage every other minute of the week.

Image credits: passthedrink

#14

Waking up at 5/6am to be ultra productive as early as possible. Prioritise your sleep, guys

Edit: being a morning person is different and obviously if this sleep schedule works for you then great. But what's toxic is that it's pushed that waking up as early as possible is the best thing for everyone to be doing which is not true.

Image credits: QuickVideo8185

#15

A popular self-care trend that’s actually toxic is constantly practicing ‘cutting off’ anyone who doesn’t agree with you. Sometimes, it’s important to have tough conversations, even if they’re uncomfortable. Isolating yourself from any criticism doesn’t help with personal growth.?.

Image credits: killersmilee

#16

Self-prioritization to the extent that it morphs into main character syndrome or some other sort of extreme selfishness.

Other people matter too and I think we often need reminders of that.

Image credits: protomanEXE1995

#17

Only doing things that feel good or spark joy. Sometimes for your own long term health and future you must do things that aren’t super duper fun.

Image credits: Avocado-Toast-93

#18

I swear to God. The blatant selfishness I’ve seen under the guise of “protecting your boundaries”.

Yes, boundaries are important, but sometimes you should show up even when you’re not in the perfect mood. Sometimes you should do the favor without keeping score. And sometimes you should have the uncomfortable conversation even though you’d rather stick your head in the sand to protect your peace.

I completely forgot where I read/saw/heard this but it was something along the lines of “These people are going to end up with perfect boundaries and no friends” and that rang so true for me.

Image credits: ikbenlauren

#19

Obsessively tracking every detail of your health can lead to more stress than benefits.

Image credits: DreamCrazeOreo95

#20

Neglecting sleep to get ahead in school or your career. Not getting enough sleep will catch up to you.

#21

Those “aLpHa” boot camps are bad news.

The whole concept is nonsense, and a trap to exploit insecure men and take their money.

I think the female equivalent is those trips where they pay to go into the woods and scream and break things.

Just get a real therapist. It might even be covered by your health insurance.

Image credits: -ItsCasual-

#22

Selfdiagnosing ADHD, OCD all those kinds of things. Lets leave that to the professionals. Feeling a bit of chaos in your head sometimes does not automatically make you have adhd.

#23

Therapy speak as a whole. People parrot it with no real understanding and next thing it's being misused and abused everywhere. Words like "triggered" and "boundaries" do my head in. They both mean something very important and significant, but they don't mean what the internet uses them as.

#24

Thinking so highly of yourself that constructive criticism appears to be hateful.

Image credits: HeartonSleeve1989

#25

Conflating “beauty culture” with self care. Patriarchy and capitalism convincing you to obsess over wrinkles showing, etc and making you engage in a million step beauty routine is not healthy or actually Caring for yourself, it’s actually unhealthy for your mind and body .. and wallet.

Image credits: stormfox222

#26

Every fad diet ever.

Image credits: BudgetBotMakinTots

#27

Avoiding difficult conversations in the name of positive vibes.

Image credits: sad_boi_jazz

#28

The Law of Attraction.

No one wants cancer, depression or a s****y spouse.

Stop telling people they can solve these things with positive thinking.

Do the therapy, take the meds, he's not going to change!

#29

Not sure if it's popular anymore, but those 10-step skincare routines.

Unless you actually know what products work for your skin AND actually find using like 10 products relaxing, you should use less. Otherwise, its a waste of money, waste of time, and could create more problems than fix them. Less is More, and it's better to focus on the efficiency of one product at tackling one of your skin's needs.

Image credits: tropic_salvo

#30

Insisting that self-care needs to be solitary and cost money. For most people, the self-care they really need is quality time with friends, family, and community, not buying some c**p to put on your face while you're alone in the tub.

Don't get me wrong, I'm an introvert and alone time keeps me sane, but I don't know if I've ever seen people celebrate "self-care" as being social.

Image credits: flyingdics

#31

Too much retail therapy/little treat culture. Obviously sometimes buying yourself something nice or getting a little treat because you did something great or had a bad day is fine and good. You can’t just constantly deprive yourself. But there’s a fine line between “I had a bad day, gotta get a Starbucks/cave in and buy that thing I’ve been looking for” and coffee out every day and a constant stream of Amazon boxes full of trinkets you don’t truly desire coming to the house. I’ve seen people put themselves into bad financial situations or turn into borderline hoarders because “I deserve a little treat” but it’s literally every day.

Image credits: TerribleAttitude

#32

I think some people cut others out of their lives instead of learning how to navigate complex emotions and situations. Sometimes it's the most healthy thing you can do, and sometimes it just seems like people are hiding, or maybe engaging in some other destructive behavior.

Image credits: Electric-Sheepskin

#33

Forcing yourself to do intense exercise instead of listening to your body and resting when needed.

Image credits: noodlesquare

#34

Ozempic and the like for people who do not have type 2 diabetes and/or morbid obesity. Those d**g have some very nasty side effects, and they don't always go away when the person stops taking them.

#35

Productivity as self worth and the constant pursuit of efficiency. It starts to feel like an obligation rather than self care. There’s so much pressure to optimize- and it IS toxic.

#36

Juicing. I wouldn’t say it’s “toxic”, but you’re literally just removing the fiber and making it more of a fast sugar.

#37

“You do you.” “Be yourself.” YOLO. Well what if “being yourself” is killing/hurting somebody. It reinforces sociopathic behavior. We have lost the moral code that makes society cohesive. And I’m not talking about laws, religion, etc. specifically, just basic decency. Like not being an a*****e.

#38

Giving kids iPads and iPhones at young ages. My cousins did this with all 3 of their kids. They are all literally in their teens now and I swear I’ve never had a conversation worth remembering with any of them.

They are my family but they are 3 little super socially awkward pasty white weirdos. Sat there and played chess on the iPad on Christmas Day ALL day. The youngest one has an interest in rocks and fossils so at least that’s something lol.

#39

Cancelling people to get internet points. There are valid reasons to do this in some situations, but I'm seeing more and more of a worrying trend where people simply don't want to have difficult conversations, or, even worse, they love to put themselves as the hero in a story that never existed except in their own minds. Permanent damage is being done and when this trend fades out it will be extremely difficult to rebuild those bridges that have been burned.

#40

When my dad had terminal cancer, we had so many family members pushing the dumbest “cures”. From essential oils to sitting in an oxygen chamber. We actually had a few WTF laughs.

#41

Essential oils.

#42

The whole “my feeling are as real as facts” self help nonsense.

It is maddening to be in a relationship with someone that will insist on you apologizing for how they feel about what you said or did without regard to what actually happened.

#43

The overuse of botox, fillers, lip injections, using loads of face care products and makeup with toxic ingredients. Ladies, let your skin breathe!! Stop contouring your face every damn day, you don't need it. Save it for going out, not just sitting at home doing tiktoks and taking selfies.

Also being nasty or mean to others in lieu of setting reasonable appropriate boundaries and communicating like an adult.

#44

Consuming a lot of "self-care" or "motivational" content, be it from books, guides, online videos, etc. It seems to be very easy for it to become cheap entertainment that feels like it'll at some point automatically unlock something in you even without making any effort to make necessary changes.

Image credits: Bynming

#45

Any self-care multi-level marketing is toxic.

A lot of self-care influencing is also toxic because of the subtle narrative that even if you buy all the products they're pushing, it will never be enough. You will never be the "It" girl because she doesn't exist. That leaves people in a cycle of debt and poor self-image.

Also, the zero-waste trend specifically about using charcoal powder in DIY mascara... literally toxic, because it wasn't meant for your eyes.

#46

Healing crystals.

#47

Almost all of them.

Life is not meant to be a constant emotional evolution, and you don’t always have something you’re meant to be improving on to get “over there”.

Sometimes it’s okay to just be, how you are, without needing to grow or change.

Toxic positivity, ‘wellness’ and self improvement is to blame for many people feeling s****y about themselves.

#48

Loving yourself no matter what can be bad for you, sometimes you’re just wrong and need to change. Parts of you are s**t.

#49

Obsessively tracking every calorie can turn self-care into stress.

#50

I'd argue that the use of self care as a way to excuse oneself from responsibility was trendy. At the end of the day, going through unpleasant things and doing the dirty work head on will yield you with better results than choosing self care the moment you feel uncomfortable or anxious.

#51

“Intermittent fasting” has been linked to a 91% higher risk of cardiovascular disease by the American Heart Association.

Image credits: Turbulent-Good227

#52

Bedrotting, or stagnation and phone scrolling as "mental health days"

Yeah it feels good but that doesn't mean it's good FOR you, and it's way too easy to make it a recurring habit

Yes, mental health days are important, but you should at least move your body and make some food or listen to music or even just stare at the sky. Just being on your phone is not mental health.

-someone who has been guilty of this a lot and is trying to break the habit.

#53

The idea that “no is a complete sentence,” you don’t owe anyone a single thing, don’t do anything you don’t want to do, social obligation is imaginary, diatribe. Oh ok, tell me you have no friends and strained relationships with your family without telling me you have no friends and strained relationships with family.

To a certain extent obviously we all have to set some boundaries and prioritize our own wellbeing over that of others. But if everyone lived their lives this way then no one would have any friends or social networks whatsoever.

#54

Frequent chemical peels.

#55

I'm a pharmacist.

Every health intervention you see by a non health practitioner is a scam

Every

Single

One.

#56

Those teas or gummy vitamins or supplements that claim to get rid of your bloating are just laxatives. They get rid of your bloating by making you s**t out all the water in your body.

#57

"Manifesting"


Wishful thinking and guilt-tripping for most people. *Absolute hell* for those of us with OCD.

#58

The rise of productivity systems.

It’s horrible to market more systems to perfectionists that they have to upkeep, only to get discouraged because they can’t perfectly use the system given, and then saying “well you just aren’t actually doing dopamine cleansing perfectly”.

#59

Tanning.

#60

I’ve seen several videos, where people just restock their guest bathrooms. It’s totally unnecessary and a lot of waste. I mean, who does a whole skincare routine in someone else’s bathroom with random products they’ve bought?

#61

Copious amounts of a single ingredient to “reduce inflammation” or whatever else.

No, consuming a c**p ton of turmeric, garlic, or whatever food won’t fix you. But it might make you more susceptible to the bad side effects of that food or even a food allergy.

#62

Social media detoxes can be toxic if they’re used to escape real problems.

#63

Supplementing with Cassia cinnamon can be toxic to the liver. Ceylon is the better choice due to its lower coumarin content.

#64

Acupuncture and chiropractory.

It's fine if it helps you relax, but that pseudoscience is just that.

Image credits: shrug_addict

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