andrewducker: (Default)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2004-02-28 10:49 am

Distorted Reflection

I have a fairly large chunk of self-confidence. Which isn't to say that I think I'm perfect - I have plenty of people around who will happily put me straight if I veer too far in that direction - but I do think that I'm fairly interesting, smart and fun to be around (if you're my kind of person - I'm probably not much fun to be around if you're into football, eastenders and gangsta rap).

Anyway, I'm fairly confident in my own general goodness. I don't need reassuring on this, partially because I get enough general background levels of reassurance and partially because other people's opinions don't actually matter a hell of a lot to me when it comes to matters of aesthetics - _I_ like me.

What baffles the hell out of me is why people that seem obviously cool to me - smart, funny, interesting people, who are capable, creative, fun and generally froody, _aren't_ self-confident. They need other people to tell them that they're worth knowing. They need reassurance. They don't believe, deep down, that they're good people.

Ed pointed out yesterday (yeah, this was the other conversation we had. Well, we chatted a lot about a wide variety of silly things, but I don't tend to catalogue silliness most of the time) that people look at themselves and see faults. That a cool person looking in the mirror may see nothing but the faults they have, much in the same way that an anorexic may look in the mirror and think "If I was just a stone lighter..." when they're already a bag of skin and bones.

So, all you people with low self esteem - why is it that you feel that you're a bad person? Do you think that you are undeserving? Or that you are deserving, but that the world will never recognise that? What do you need reassurance about? What would make you believe that you were good?

Re: From Ekatarina

[identity profile] green-amber.livejournal.com 2004-02-28 05:15 pm (UTC)(link)
Fathers, huh.
My father's great line was always: "If you coud just loise a stone or two {Amber}, you'de really be quite pretty."

My mothers' was "SO you got 95%. Where did the other 5% go?" It was a joke of course, but not a joke really.

It's very tiring trying to be perfect but I don't know any other way to survive.

I don't think I can understand people who don't understand low self esteem. Most people have it and live with it - it's like the common cold, or tooth decay.

Re: From Ekatarina

[identity profile] ekatarina.livejournal.com 2004-02-28 06:01 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm with you all over there!

I loved getting my mother to read my essays since she would check my spelling, maybe make suggestions on grammar, but she would not pick about my thesis - unless it was truly awful in which case she would save me from myself. Mothers are supposed to do that.

And yes, we low-esteemers just make do, or we don't and we do ourselves in.

I am a nice person, I have had nice relationships, I have fabulous friends who tell me how wonderful I am, I have had a great life and I plan on continuing that. No one is happy all the time, it's unnatural.

Things get better. I no longer believe I am worthless, I just have brief moods when I do. I no longer live in no-self-esteem-world 24/7 but I still make short trips there. I think that is normal. And I think that reassessing why I go there and why I come back is important.

I realize I am beautiful and talented and amazing and that not having a professional career as a celebrity does no in any way diminish my wonderfulness as a singer, writer, scholar, or fry-cook.

I am me. I rock. Life rolls on.

There are parts of me that I may never "fix" and that's fine as well. Maybe I'll never have the dizzying highs of life that some of my friends have been able to enjoy, but my life does not suck so I am cool with that.

Sigh, time for dinner.

Ekatarina
moniqueleigh: Me after my latest haircut. Pic by <lj site="livejournal.com" user="seabat"> (c) 03/2008 (Gemini - Pracownik)

Re: From Ekatarina

[personal profile] moniqueleigh 2004-02-29 01:42 am (UTC)(link)
Ouch. You know, you've pretty much described me in your comments.

My dad also was of the "where's the other 5 points" sort. My mum was the supportive "save me from myself" one. (Thank all the gods for that, because some days she's the only reason I survived.)

I'm a weird mix of some days realizing that I'm attractive & intelligent, while other days I think I'm the ugliest & stupidest twit on the planet. Most days, I'm somewhere in the middle, but leaning towards the intelligent side of things even when I'm not so certain of the physical.

*shrug* Schoolmates reinforced my positive view of my intelligence, but didn't help at all with my general feelings of ugly-duckling-ness.