“No Amount of Baths Is Gonna Make You Feel Better”: Seeking Balance, Wholeness, and Well-being in Everyday Self-Care

Quinci Adams
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Recently, the concept of “self-care” has shifted from the sphere of biomedicine into popular discourse; rather than indicating the practice of maintaining physical health, the term has come to represent a set of broader and more commonplace practices aimed at achieving balance, wholeness, and overall well-being. Drawing from interviews and participant observation with young adult respondents both in college and recently graduated, this study explores what it means to practice this type of “everyday self-care.” Those who practice everyday self-care do so to seek out a holistic sense of happiness and well-being; they value self-care that engages their “whole” self – one conceptualized as made up of both mind and body. They strive for balance in tensions between self-control and indulgence, long-term well-being and immediate gratification, and selfishness and community. Self-care cannot be summed up in a list of activities or practices; rather, it necessitates an ongoing production of moral, economic, and social meanings.
“再多的洗澡也不会让你感觉更好”:在日常自我护理中寻求平衡、完整和幸福
最近,“自我保健”的概念已经从生物医学领域转移到大众话语;这个词不再是指保持身体健康的实践,而是代表了一系列更广泛、更常见的旨在达到平衡、完整和整体健康的实践。通过对大学生和刚毕业的年轻人的访谈和参与观察,本研究探讨了实践这种“日常自我照顾”的意义。那些每天自我照顾的人这样做是为了寻求一种整体的幸福感和幸福感;他们重视自我照顾,把他们的“整体”自我——一个由精神和身体组成的概念。他们努力在自我控制与放纵、长期幸福与眼前满足、自私与集体之间的紧张关系中取得平衡。自我保健不能用一系列活动或实践来总结;相反,它需要不断产生道德、经济和社会意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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