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When Self-Care Becomes Another Thing to Be Good At

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She finished her workout, grabbed her water bottle, and before her heart rate had even come down, she was already scrolling through her camera roll looking for the right shot. She spent more time on the caption than she did stretching. By the time she posted, the endorphins had faded and so had most of the benefit.

We are living in the golden age of self-care content. Wellness routines are aestheticized, morning rituals are monetized, and the pressure to not only take care of yourself but to do it visibly has never been greater. Somewhere between the matching sets and the perfectly lit smoothie bowls, something got lost. For many people, self-care has quietly become one more thing to perform, optimize, and be good at, and that performance is actively canceling out the very benefits they're chasing.

The Problem With Performative Self-Care

Performative self-care isn't exclusively a social media problem, though that's where it shows up most visibly. It's any act of self-care where your attention is somewhere other than the moment you're in. It's the walk where you're mentally composing a caption before you've reached the end of the block. It's the meditation session you screenshot to show you showed up, while your mind was three tasks ahead the entire time. It's the yoga class you attended physically while being completely absent mentally.

The issue isn't the walk or the workout or even the post. The issue is what happens when we multitask our own restoration. The neurological benefits of exercise, the emotional reset of a quiet morning, the genuine recentering that comes from a real break — all of these require presence. When we split our attention between the experience and the promotion of the experience, we shortchange ourselves of the very thing we showed up for. We get the optics of self-care without the substance of it.

There's also a deeper psychological pattern worth naming. For high achievers especially, performative self-care can serve a particular function: it allows us to signal that we're okay to ourselves and to others without requiring us to do the harder internal work of actually becoming okay. It's self-care as reputation management. And when wellness becomes content, it becomes competitive. When it becomes competitive, it becomes another arena where we measure ourselves and another place we can quietly fall short.

What Real Self-Care Actually Looks Like

Real self-care is largely invisible. It doesn't photograph well. It often isn't comfortable in the moment, and it rarely gets likes.

It looks like saying no to something you genuinely don't have the capacity for and sitting with the discomfort of disappointing someone without immediately trying to smooth it over. It looks like stepping away from your phone during dinner, not because you announced a digital detox, but because you made a quiet decision that your presence mattered more than your feed. It looks like noticing the dozens of small transitions you already have throughout your day, the walk to your car, the two minutes before a meeting begins, the quiet commute, and choosing not to fill every open space with something your brain has learned to associate with productivity.

Real self-care is deliberate, consistent, and often uncomfortable. It requires the one thing that high achievers and over-functioners tend to resist most: doing less. It requires boundaries — real ones; not the kind announced in a caption, but the kind quietly held in your daily decisions. It means protecting your sleep even when there's more to do, ending the workday when you said you would, and choosing a genuine reset over an impressive one.

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And real self-care is something you simply keep for yourself. Not everything that restores you needs to be shared, documented, or validated. In fact, there's something worth examining in the impulse to share it at all. When the act of caring for ourselves becomes something we perform for an audience, even a small one, we've already stepped a little outside of it.

I'm not suggesting we stop posting our workouts or sharing our wellness wins. Connection and community have real value, and there's nothing inherently wrong with celebrating a healthy habit. But it's worth asking honestly: am I present for this, or am I producing it? Am I resetting, or am I performing a reset?

The goal of self-care was never to look well. It was to become well, steadily, privately, consistently, in the small and unglamorous choices that nobody else sees. Self-care is that walk where you left your phone at home, that boundary you held without explaining yourself, and that moment where you actually sat still long enough to find out how you were doing.

Nobody has to know, and, actually, that might be the point.


© Psychology Today