“To
be healthy, functioning individuals, we need to feel good about
ourselves. To feel good about ourselves, we need to feel that our time
and energy is spent meaningfully. Meaning is the fuel of our minds. When
you run out of it, everything else stops working.”
Most
of us struggle with self esteem. Many of us are fortunate enough to
realize this, and some of us care enough to try to fix it.
The
problem, however, is with the majority of the resources available to
us — especially online. I am pretty sure these articles are 100% written
by people who have serious self esteem issues, regurgitated from
everyone else who has self esteem issues, on down the cycle to readers
with self esteem issues, who think it’s just their fault for not being
able to apply them and successfully boost their self esteem.
But of course not. Because none of this is how self esteem works.
First, let’s talk about what self esteem ISN’T:
Self esteem is not selfishness or narcissism
Having
to say this makes me impatient, because if people don’t innately “get
it,” they fight it blindly, emotionally, tooth and nail. And I
understand, because there are a lot of emotions on the line here (see:
entire post) so I’m just going to tread lightly and quickly when I say:
Self love and self esteem are not selfishness.
On
the contrary, selfish people have desperately low self esteem and self
love, which is why they overcompensate, demand, and have nothing left to
give others.
Self esteem is not a series of “dont’s”
Most self esteem articles cheerily suggest things like, “Don’t have negative self talk. Don’t compare yourself to others. Don’t put yourself down. Don’t doubt yourself,” like “just don’t have low self esteem!”
These aren’t solutions.
- The brain struggles with the word “don’t,” and when you focus on the negative, you’re still focusing on the thing. The brain interprets the sentence as an imperative, like: “ah, okay, negative self talk. Got it!” The brain is baby Groot.
- The way we talk to ourself is a reflection of self esteem, not the root. It’s
effect, not cause. It helps, of course, but it’s not the core. And
fixing the core will fix the way we think and talk about ourselves.
- Nature abhors a vacuum. If you don’t have something positive at the ready, the old stuff will just rush back in.
Self esteem does not come from others
It’s not anyone’s job to make you feel good about yourself. It can only come from you.
Trying to build self esteem through “others’ compliments” is like trying to learn how to walk by being carried.
Only you control of your self-acceptance and self-love.
Self esteem is not in “self help”
This is just an extension of the above.
Self
help just replaces one external influence for another. We’re still
grasping for some authority figure, some omnipotent voice, to tell us
what to do.
This
of course includes this very post. Which is ironic, but at least honest
and warm-hearted, because I wrote this only after doing tons of similar
reading myself, and I write hoping we all resolve this.
Self help will never help
When
I was getting my business off the ground, in the 3 dark months of
“white noise” after quitting my job but before getting my first
customer, isolated and running mostly on “faith” alone, someone asked
me, “what kind of music do you listen to during the day?” I told them,
“on good days, upbeat music. On bad days, chill music. And I know it’s
an ugly day when I resort to motivational videos on YouTube.”
Those videos got me nowhere — except maybe through the day.
You
want to know what finally kicked my self esteem back into gear? When I
started making sales. Once that happened, I never watched another
motivational, “self-help” video.
Self esteem is not about “pampering”
My
god, if we could all stop with the “indulgences” and “little day to day
pleasures;” if only we could stop thinking “self love” is about
“treating ourselves,” or “scheduling time every day for fun and
relaxation.”
“Real
self-love isn’t about ‘treating yourself’… because real self-love is
less about babying yourself and more about parenting yourself.”
Good
parents don’t indulge children with candy each time they cry. Good
parents support, teach coping mechanisms, and gently encourage growth.
This is what loving ourselves means as well. It’s not about daily indulgences. It’s identifying and pursuing our longterm values.
Self esteem is not about affirmations
Fuck writing down all your best qualities.
I don’t know who came up with this terrible advice, but it’s pretty much useless. Consider, for a moment, the most genuinely confident person you know — do they sit down every day and write down their best qualities? Maybe they do, but I doubt it.
Confident people don’t do this. And people don’t magically become confident doing it. Only self-doubting people get stuck in this compulsive loop.
Self love is not about affirmations.
“Claiming
to love yourself and actually doing the hard work of loving yourself
are not the same thing… You can repeat a thousand affirmations an hour,
write a limitless number of blog posts about how you’re worthy of love
and stick millions of post-it notes reminding yourself how awesome you
are on every mirror in your house, but that only gets you 10% of the way
to self-love.”
Except it’s more like 0%.
The real solution is: agency, awareness, authenticity, and action.
What self esteem IS:
Step 1.) Self esteem is agency
Self love is taking responsibility.
So
many terrible articles encourage readers to keep self esteem at the
mercy of external forces, prompting them to “think about what is
affecting your self-esteem,” and suggesting “your confidence may have
been lowered after a difficult experience or series of negative life
event, such as: being bullied or abused, losing your job or difficulty finding employment, ongoing stress
physical illness, mental health problems, a difficult relationship, separation or divorce.”
No. To this entire list: no.
I’m
not saying that bad shit didn’t happen to you — it probably did.
Because bad things happens to everyone. But life isn’t about playing the
victim, or comparing notes on who suffered most. Life has negatives in
the cards for everyone — even the most confident people you know — and
the only difference between those with self esteem and those without it
is that the first group chose to take responsibility for their lives,
their responses, and their actions.
So when it comes to thinking about “what is affecting your self-esteem,” the answer is always “you.”
You are in control of your self esteem. That’s the entire list, beginning to end.
you are in charge. you are in charge. you. are. in. charge.
Step 2.) Self esteem is awareness
This is super important, and we don’t talk about it enough.
Get out of your damn head. Be present.
Stop
slipping away. Stop shutting down. Stop freezing and falling silent any
time you’re uncomfortable, or unsure, or anxious. Stop reminiscing on
the past, or thinking about the future, or wandering around, mentally,
anywhere that you actually aren’t.
We
do this is because we’ve learned that “shutting down” offers
security — it’s “easier” if we don’t engage; we think there’s less risk.
But
what we give up in exchange every time we do this is moments of our own
lives. Which is why, in those brief moments we pull our head out of the
sand, we’re filled with panic to realize we don’t like what we’re
living. But then most of us respond by seeking reassurance (see “self
help,” above — “you can do it!”) or solutions we don’t take, and ultimately shut it back down.
The first step? Awareness of your breathing.
Second, awareness of your body in space; what you’re physically
feeling. From there, you’ll become more aware of what you’re emotionally
feeling as well.
Accept these emotions as they come to you.
Wake up. Be aware of what you’re doing and where you are all the time. And most importantly: be aware of what you feel and think about it…
Step 3.) Self esteem is authenticity
It’s knowing what we actually want.
This is probably the hardest part. It’s also really important.
Because “nature abhors a vacuum,” if self esteem isn’t coming from external sources, but us instead, then we have to do the work of identifying what we want and need — in that vacuum, without regard to others. (Note: just like the “selfish” section, that is not meant to read as “without regard for others.”
We should still be considerate. But able to say what we want (or think
or feel or need) without having to first ask, “well but what do others
want?”)
Self esteem is answering “what do I think?” without first asking “what do others think?” This is harder than people realize, especially because it’s so ingrained.
I was recently thinking about what I wanted to do for Valentine’s Day, and initially could not answer this question— did I really want to go to dinner, or did I just like the way that sounded? Did I really
want flowers, or did I just hope they’d serve as some security; some
certainty that this was special? Did I really even want to do anything? Sometimes we do things we don’t even really want, but doing what “sounds good” saves us the risk of regretting having not done something come the morning of the 15th.
(In the end, what I wanted
was a cookie from our favorite local bakery. We go together all the
time and they put out these seasonal designs that are so adorable I
could die. And then, like a good partner, I said in clear words that
that’s what I wanted.)
Sometimes we’re asked: “What would you do if you could not fail?”
And that’s great, but an equally great question is: “What would you do if you could not tell or be told by anyone?”
Would
you get married if you had to go on telling people you weren’t? Would
you drive the same car if nobody saw? Would you do the same thing on
your weekends if you couldn’t frame it up as “how it retells on Monday
morning?” Would you vacation in the same places if nobody knew?
Would
you still be doing the same job and have the same partner if you had to
tell people you had a totally different job and partner, both of which
they deemed “unimpressive?”
What do you want? Not just in the moment, but in the long-run. What are your values? What is your version of long-term happiness?
If that’s too hard or scary to speculate:
start with a chunk of lifestyle now. Not your leisure time, but your
actual life. When, for example, are you happiest at work? If your answer
has anything to do with others (i.e., “when I get recognition,” “when I
get a raise,” “when I win a deal,” or “when I help others,” you need to
look again, for answers that serve you.) Maybe you don’t even like your work. That’s for you to explore.
If you’re struggling here and you just want more “help” on “how to do it:”
you are missing the point entirely (and probably also missing the alarm
bell that should be going off in your head.) This work fundamentally
cannot be done by anyone else. This work is you. Do the work.
If you are so far gone that you still feel lost knowing what you want on any level: you skipped self awareness. You’re not paying attention. See “step 2” for further instruction.
Skipping this step is why “just do it!” doesn’t help
Our
struggle (and reluctance) to find answers is why “advice” like “just do
it!” or “just try things and see what you like” is met with
apprehension at best, and disaster at worst. (If you aren’t in touch
with what you actually want, and what your happiness feels like, there’s
no way of even knowing if you like what you’re trying, and without this
skill set, you’ll just keep falling back on “but it sounds cool” or
“it’s what people do.”)
You
can’t know what you love if you don’t know what love feels like, and
you’re so out of touch with your own feelings you don’t know what it is.
We
have to actually know who the hell we are, and what we want.
Experimenting and taking action is second-grade reading level and we’re
still learning letters over here.
Step 4.) Self esteem is action
Only once you understand what you want — what really makes you happy — in the long run.
Action
is about making decisions. It’s about committing. It’s about choice and
assertiveness and asking for the things we want and need. It’s about
taking steps, and thinking, and coming to our conclusions — and then
verbalizing them.
It’s also about being aware. It’s about being alert and awake and active in our own lives — not passive, compliant, or submissive.
As Nathaniel Branden wrote in “How to Raise Your Self Esteem,”
“Living
consciously means taking responsibility for the awareness appropriate
to the action in which we are engaged. This, above all, is the
foundation of self confidence and self-respect.”
Or, to be slightly more clear,
“The difference between low self-esteem and high self-esteem is the difference between passivity and action.”
But
knowing what action to take requires knowing what we want, outside of
what others want — i.e., authenticity — which requires that we take full
responsibility for our lives. Which requires that we dump all of the
bad assumptions and models around self love, take agency in-house, and
start to build self-fueling fire of our own desire.
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