![]() ![]() ![]() Sprinkled between her sticky note mantras and slideshows of affirmations to remember, are intimate photos of her family, allowing her followers to meet the real her. “It seems like a lot of people over the past year have really started trying to get to know what their younger self wanted and needed and what makes them feel safe, seen, and supported,” adds Elle.Įlle hopes affirmations on personal growth give her followers permission to show up in their own truth and in their own healing, in a way that works for them, “the more self-aware we can be, and the more open we are to being our own inner expert and greatest teacher, the more curious we can get with our truth and that in itself offers us a different type of clarity.”įor Elle, it’s simple to know the truth. “I feel like everyone is on the same page with what they want to see and how they are healing.”Īfter a year of chaos, it would be naive to not connect the rise of affirmation accounts’ popularity and 2020. “What I have noticed most recently are people resonating with the posts linked to healing, linked to letting go and linked to emotional growth and maturity all around”, explains Alex Elle, author of After The Rain. ![]() Whether it is Bella Hadid sharing a slideshow of 5 Things You Should Hear Today or Precious Lee captioning a photo, “Affirmation Tuesday: I am abundant,” self affirming language and content have become a welcomed addition in the social media space. Lunch pics and selfies still remain in the stories, but now exist between something deeper, something that signals a connection with one's higher self. In this period of enlightenment, daily affirmations and mantras have permeated the Instagram zeitgeist in a unique way. From listening and learning to the black squares that “ healed racism”, there has been a shift of people seemingly wanting to be more conscious. ![]()
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