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3 Evidence-Based Ways to Rebuild Your Self-Esteem

by Dr. Jennifer Chen

Self-esteem feels like one of the ⁤most personal things we have,but it was never ‍meant to function as a private “truth ‌meter.”

Rather, it evolved as something closer to a social instrument panel that offers a constant‌ readout of where we stand with others and whether our place in the group feels secure.

One influential account, sociometer theory (e.g. Leary et al., ⁤1995),‍ argues that self-esteem tracks perceived acceptance and rejection, quietly nudging us⁤ to protect our belonging.From⁣ an evolutionary standpoint, that makes sense given how for most of human history, ‍being excluded was an existential threat.

This framing matters for two reasons. Frist,it grounds self-esteem in something concrete in our evolutionary past⁤ rather than mystical. second, it gives⁣ us leverage over the phenomenon itself. If self-esteem ⁢is indeed a signal rather than a⁢ verdict, then low self-esteem is not a diagnosis as much as it is indeed feedback.

And⁤ feedback, well, with that we can work with.

Before ​getting to‍ the three things you ⁢can do today, it helps to understand how the plumbing actually works.

The inner plumbing of low self-esteem

One useful way to think about sociometer ‌theory is as a kind​ of thermometer. It rises when the social environment feels warm toward us and drops when the reception ⁢turns out too⁢ cold for our liking.

The reading feels deeply personal, but it is not really measuring us as much as it is measuring our perception of how we are being perceived by others. A second-order signal complex enough to be worthy of a movie by Christopher Nolan, which explains why it can feel so immediate⁢ and yet so hard to grasp.

Understanding self-esteem’s origins leads us to two important‍ ground truths.

First, ⁣self-esteem⁢ is not an objective score. It is a subjective signal,and one that is highly sensitive to context. Put⁢ the same person into two different social groups and their self-evaluation can shift dramatically, even when nothing ​about the person has⁣ changed.

Second, the meter responds to the fundamentals of peer-group standing and status.That⁤ alone explains a great deal of human behavior, including​ how we chase visible markers⁤ of achievement, as accomplishment tends to⁣ correlate with higher​ self-esteem (e.g.Mahadevan et al., 2023). ​

Unless you plan ​to live as a hermit, the lesson‌ is not to stop comparing yourself to others.

Rather, the goal is to compare more intelligently ‍by correcting for distorted samples, understanding what the signal ⁤is​ and is not telling you, and taking intentional‍ action to move the needle ⁢ourselves.

Here are three ‌evidence-based ways to do exactly that.

Expand your comparison ‌basis and ⁤stop benchmarking yourself against a highlight​ reel

Simplifying a bit, there are two components to​ self-esteem. You, and the people whose opinions of⁣ you matter to you.

Notice what ⁤is missing. None of us cares about the judgments of⁤ everyone. Self-esteem⁢ is shaped by a relatively small circle of contemporaries, i.e. the people who count as our reference group.

Self-Esteem Essential Reads

That detail matters because it explains why ⁤calibration fails so easily. if your comparison set quietly ⁤becomes “the top one ⁣percent of whatever I⁣ care about,” your sociometer will start flashing danger even when your life ‍is, ‌by any reasonable standard, going well.

Constant upward comparison can corrode even robust se

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