EVERYONE'S
BILL OF RIGHTS
I Hold These To Be
Self-Evident
I have...
- The
right to be human (not perfect)
- The right to be who I am
- The right to exist
- The right to accept myself as I
am right now
- The right to assert myself
- The right to choose not to
assert myself
- The right to choose to
pursue a personal right
- The right to choose not to pursue a personal
right
- The right to feel the way I feel
- The right to feel that feelings are neither right
nor wrong
- The right to feel my own innate goodness
- The right to change the way I
feel, if I want to
- The right to learn how to assert
my rights
- The right to make mistakes
- The right to have and express
my
own feelings and opinions
- The right to have my own beliefs
- The right to ask for what I want
- The right to ask for information
from professionals
- The right to want what I want
- The right to change my mind
- The right to get what I pay for
- The right to make and refuse
requests without feeling guilty
- The right to make my own
decisions, to take my own consequences for them, and to judge
my
own actions
- The right to set my own
priorities
- The right to say "no"
without feeling guilty
- The right to say "I don't
know"
- The right to pursue a healthy boundary
- The right to express
unconditional love
- The right to express conditional
love
- The right to express annoyance,
displeasure, and anger with integrity
- The right to express positively
- The right to express negatively
- The right to go at my own pace
- The right to be responsible only to myself
- The right to control my own life
...without hurting others.
It is important to note that, of course,
others may have a different frame of mind or approach. Self-assertion does not
make others do what we want; it only helps us feel satisfied
that we have made known who we are and what we need.
(Thanks to the Community
Mental Health Center in Canton Illinois for the emphasis on RIGHTS, and to
various inspirational teachers.)
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