Who and What Defines Your Worth and Lovability?
Do you define your self-worth externally, through others' approval of your looks and performance? Does your weight, your hair, your money, your job, your car, your clothes, your house, your mate, or the people you know define your self-worth?
The wounded self is the part of us that is externally defined. When we are operating from our wounded self, we are constantly trying to look right and perform right, in order to get others to like us, love us or approve of us. The wounded part of us feels worthy only when receiving validation from others.
This creates much anxiety. We feel unsafe when our whole sense of self-worth hinges upon having control over getting others' approval. We may even feel panicked when we fear making mistakes and running the risk of disapproval and rejection. We may find ourselves judging ourselves in our effort to get ourselves to look "right" or do things "right".
The wounded self believes we can have control over how others see us and feel about us. Therefore, according to the wounded self, if someone doesn't like us, it must be our fault: "Did I say something wrong?" "What did I do wrong?" Believing it is our fault gives the wounded self a sense of power and control: "If it is my fault that someone doesn't like me or rejects me, then I just have to figure out how to do it right, and then I can have control over how others feel about me."
Core Shame
Core shame comes from the false belief that there is something intrinsically wrong with you - that you are inherently bad, wrong, defective, flawed, unimportant, unworthy, inadequate. As small children, if we didn't get the love we needed, we may have concluded that it was our fault, rather than recognize our parents' inability to love us in the way we needed to be loved. If we had recognized our parents' woundedness and limitations, we would have felt crushingly helpless over getting the love we needed. Instead, most of us chose to try to have control over getting the love we needed, and over avoiding the rejection (or abuse) we feared. The only way we could feel this sense of control, was to believe that their behavior was our fault.
We concluded that, since their lack of love was our fault, we must have been somehow defective. Accordingly, we needed to believe in our own inherent defectiveness, in order to feel a sense of control over our parents' behavior.
The problem is, we forgot that we actually chose to believe in our core shame; many of us now operate out of our core shame as if it is who we are. When we believe we are inherently defective, we then have to hide our real self, our essence, and try to become what we think we need to be, to be acceptable. The wounded self takes over and loses touch with our core Self - who we really are. We are stuck defining ourselves through our looks and performance, and we are stuck suffering the anxiety that comes from being so vulnerable to others’ disapproval.
Defining Self-Worth Through the Eyes of Spirit
When we move into the intent to learn, one of the things we need to learn about is who we really are. However, we can't know this through our mind’s eyes - the eyes of our wounded self who is filled with false beliefs. We can know who we truly are only through the eyes of Truth, the eyes of Spirit.
When we look at ourselves through the eyes of Truth, we can begin to move beyond defining our self-worth externally, and learn to see who we are internally.
Think for a moment about what you really value in others. Do you value a fancy car over kindness and caring? If you had a choice between two friends - one who was good looking, wealthy, closed and sometimes mean, and the other, who was plainer, not as rich, but open, loving and kind - who would you pick? Whenever I've asked people this question, no one has ever said, "Oh, I would pick the meaner one." In others, we often value honesty, kindness, generosity, compassion, understanding, empathy, vitality, humor, acceptance and so on. Yet many of us rarely define our own self-worth by these qualities.
Defining your self-worth internally means opening to learning about your core Self. Try to imagine who you were before your wounded self took over. Were you loving, caring, fun, alive, creative, sensitive, passionate? If you had you as a child, what would you value in that child? Would the child be worthy in your eyes only if he or she performed right or looked right, or would you see inside to who this child really is?
In relationships, when we make another responsible for defining our self-worth, we will then try to control how that person feels about us. This creates many problems in relationships, since we are trying to get love, rather than share love. Only when we accept the responsibility of defining our own self-worth and learn to be loving to ourselves, will we have love to share with others.
Join Dr. Margaret Paul for her 30-Day at-home Course: "Love Yourself: An Inner Bonding Experience to Heal Anxiety, Depression, Shame, Addictions and Relationships."
Photo by Mark Asthoff
- Comments
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Kels707B - 10/07/2019 04:49 AM
Hi Dr M. What if you are in a relationship and you are "plainer, not as rich, but open, loving and kind" and so are other women whom your partner knows and likes. What if you have a friend who is also "plainer, not as rich, but open, loving and kind", what makes your partner stay with you when he could be with another who has the same qualities?
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Dr.Margaret - Berthoud - 10/07/2019 12:02 PM
Why not ask your partner? Everyone's essence unique and special and just become someone is like you, doesn't mean your partner has the same connection he has with you.
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Kels707B - 10/07/2019 11:04 PM
Thanks Dr M. What I am worried about is (i) he is with me because he doesn’t think he can be with the other girl so he has settled for me; and (ii) we don’t have a great connection or click, he has a better one with her but because of (i) he stays with me; and (iii) if (i) and (ii) are true then as soon as another woman he feels more connected too gives him a sign she wants to be with him too then he will leave me for them.
Because I see my partner “get on” with so many other women and in my opinion, they click more than me and him - we are very different. They agree on things, they have the same mindset, they have the same business ideas, they have the same reason for creating a business for fun and to make money (whereas I would prefer for it have meaning and help others), they have the same opinions on things, they have similar interests, the same sense of humour etc. When I see him talking to these women, I wonder why is he with me when he could be with someone like him who he clicks with?
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suziqzee - Charlotte - 10/07/2019 11:17 PM
I wonder if our culture has contributed to the erroneous view that our beloved must have a unique, special, once in a lifetime connection with only us and no one else, in order for the relationship to remain stable/special?
My grandmother's generation didn't have that view. They felt that any time two nice people committed to each other, over time, the length of their shared experience and ever deepening affection/familiarity/ history makes them irreplaceable. If my grandfather had run into a woman the clone of his wife, he would not have wanted her bcs his wife has shared so much with him.
My grandfather was an intellectual, my grandmother an earthy peasant. He loved her wholesome positivity and she loved his calm sprituality. It was a good match but they both had many friends who filled in spaces their spouse did not.
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Kels707B - 10/08/2019 05:12 AM
Hi Suz - I like your comment "they felt that any time two nice people committed to each other, over time, the length of their shared experience and ever deepening affection/familiarity/ history makes them irreplaceable. If my grandfather had run into a woman the clone of his wife, he would not have wanted her bcs his wife has shared so much with him".
Maybe that is it, over time I have showed my partner love when he has been unloveable and vice versa. I have supported him in his darkest hours and celebrated with him in his greatest hours and he has done the same for me. As much as I would enjoy the conversation or companionship with someone who is similar or disimilar to my partner, I wouldn't want to be with them - why? Because the bond between my partner and I runs deeper than common interests, ideas and opinions - he knows me at my core and I know him. This is the same for my bestfriends too, no one can replace them!
Thank you for sharing your story. My Guidance whispered "YES, that's it" when I read it :)
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Gigigrl77 - 10/08/2019 10:59 AM
Hello , I’ve been dealing with this shame and unworthiness for awhile. I lost my mother as a young girl (12) and emotionally didn’t have the love and care I needed . I am highly sensitive . For many years I’d used alcohol to mask pain , now I’m not but I’m struggling with how to handle the negative self talk , how do I control this and not be in a state of anxiety and feeling less than . I just want to grow. I pray , write out affirmations , but I still seek that peace and love and unconditional love of self . I’m going through a personal setback so it’s magnified at the moment . Thank you for this site . I will dig into as much as I can . I’ve always relied on others feedback to feel good but I want / need to learn these tools myself. Thank you for listening.
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Kels707B - 10/09/2019 01:07 AM
Hi Dr M, I asked my partner why we are compatible and why he chooses me and he said he doesn’t know why, he just is and we are compatible and we work together but he can’t list reasons
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Dr.Margaret - Berthoud - 10/09/2019 04:37 AM
He likely can't articulate the energy between you that creates the connection. You need to let that be okay. He might also feel pulled on to reassure you and is resisting that.
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Kels707B - 10/09/2019 05:11 AM
Okay thanks Dr M. I am pulling on him for reassurance that we have a connection because I’m listening to the lies of my WS (who says we don’t have a connection) instead of the truth of my Guidance (who says we do have a connection). If I believed my Guidance, I wouldn’t need or want to ask my partner these questions.
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suziqzee - Charlotte - 10/15/2019 02:35 PM
G girl, this mental habit takes a lot of practice to break. I am still working on it daily--and I keep improving--sloooowly. So i hope you are not discouraged if you find progress is slow and/or it feels like one takes steps backwards at times. I've found it invaluabletobe on IBV daily.
Kels, in that vid I shared by the hilarious minister, where he describes the difference between male and female brains, this kind of "why do you like me?" requests for reassurance are on par with "do I look fat?" type of questions that put off men (and women....only women tend to do this more).
In fact, I helped a woman get rid of her dangerously abusive husband (verbally and physcially abusive, had isolated her from her family and friends) by having her turn from frightened, eager to please slave into dependent, needy, pulling, bed ridden with mysterious illness, stone around his neck.
She was terrified if she left him he would kill her ( a real risk). Instead, she took to bed, unable to cook, clean, have sex and left needy notes in his pockets (do you still love me even though I'm sick? what do you love about me?), called him at work all day with a pulling , "I love you!! Just called to tell you that!! do you love me? do you really, really love me? why?"
After six weeks, he left her!
A comedian in my city recently made a joke about this. He suggested the CIA could put suspected terrorists 8 hours a day with a woman who pulled on him this way. Not against the Geneva convention and far more diabolical than waterboarding (LOL!!)
I used to feel great embarrassment at admitting that I used to pull on my daughter for such reassurance . What worked well for us: explaining what WS pulling is and telling her she was free to tell me "this feels like WS pulling, so I'm not going to respond/give the hug, etc." Do you think such an agreement might work for you and your BF? I ask this, bcs my daughter felt it greatly mitigated the pain of being pulled on when I gave her this option.
Also, we began to humorously joke about this WS part of me. It helped me accept this part of me with compassion as well as the need I have in general for external validation.
I hired coaches fiveyears years ago--simply because i needed external validation to honor my true self. Now I listen to my IC/Guidance most of the time .
In the recent reiki course I took, one of the leaders humorously pretended to pull for validation from the female leader and she pretended to do the same to him. Even in "pretend" play, it was a pulling/turn off energy. Great demo to all of us on how to exchange energy without being depleting.
When I feel I am seeking validation rather than extending love to my daughter or friends... I try to do something loving for myself and often (but not always) manage to avoid acting on that desire to pull for validation. It keeps getting better Kels!
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suziqzee - Charlotte - 10/15/2019 02:36 PM
P.S. over time, you and your partner will endure financial ups and downs, illness, the death of parents, the birth of children. These shared experences become golden bonds that no one can duplicate.
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Dr.Margaret - Berthoud - 10/15/2019 03:32 PM
Suzi, what a masterful way to help her get out of an abusive relationship!
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suziqzee - Charlotte - 10/15/2019 09:10 PM
Dr M, this happened decades ago. I wonder if I would have the courage to do this today, int his highly litigious, unforgiving culture? I hope I would.
I had encouraged a patient being beaten by her husband to get a restraining order and leave him. After she did both these things, he came to her home and committed a murder-suicide.
After that, i wasn't going to suggest such a move ever again. With this second patient, I wrote a note explaining the wife's severe and progressive illness and had the husband come in to speak to me. He was a scary character. I explained his wife's total, progressive invalid state. I also applauded him for his support-- letting him know that 90% of men in his position file for divorce, especially if they were young like him.
It was very hard for this woman to pretend to be madly in love with her husband and seek his reassurance he loved her. But after a few weeks, it became easy bcs she saw it was driving him crazy ;).
The day she came into my office to tell me he had left her a brief note that their marriage was over and she would hear from his attorney-- and to never contact him again-- was one of the best days of my life and for sure of hers.
I learned from the terrible mistake I made with that first patient, may she rest in peace.
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Dr.Margaret - Berthoud - 10/16/2019 04:27 AM
Suzi, I have had to deal with the same issue with many clients, and I always recommend that if they leave the reilationship, they need to go into permanent hiding where he can't find her. Unfortunately, your experience occurs all too often. Your plan was masterful, but it might not work with a man who wants his wife to need him so he can completely control her.
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suziqzee - Charlotte - 10/16/2019 04:04 PM
Yes, that's exactly true. I had a good sense of this guy from many conversations with my patient, his wife and also meeting him one time in person.
It's very sad that restraining orders are often a red flag to a bull and brings on such violent, tragic consequences. I agree-- going into hiding is often the only way to safely leave.
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