Empowering You
Empowering You
Empowering You
You to Love
Yourself
Revised Edition
By Suzanne E. Harrill
Published by
Innerworks Publishing
167 Glengarry Pl.
Castle Rock CO 80108
www.InnerworksPublishing.com
This is a revised edition of,
Empowering You to Love Yourself
Original Copyright 1995
ISBN: 1-883648-01-7
All rights reserved. No part of, EmpoweringYou to Love Yourself may be
reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or
mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information
storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the publisher,
except for the inclusion of brief quotes in a review.
For teaching purposes, you may copy the Self-Esteem Awareness Inventory,
Eight Keys for Building Self-Esteem, Twelve Steps of AA Rewritten for
Building Self-Esteem, and quotes of 50 words or less. Please give credit.
This book is dedicated to:
My husband, Rodney
And my three daughters,
Lindy, Janna, and Sarah
Table of Contents
Introduction and Acorn Analogy
PART I - Getting Started
Learn To Love Yourself
The Self-Esteem Awareness Inventory
PART II - What Is Self-Esteem?
Myths About Self-Esteem
Characteristics of High Self-Esteem
Reasons Why People Have Low Self-Esteem
Recognizing People With Low Self-Esteem
What Keeps Low Self-Esteem Alive?
PART III - The Eight Keys to Loving Yourself
1. Accept Yourself as You Are Right Now
2. Look Inside Yourself, Not Outside
3. Stop Value-Judging Yourself
4. Separate YOU From Your Behavior
5. Stop Comparing Yourself to Others
6. Know You Are Doing Your Best
7. Know You Are Worthy of Unconditional Love
8. Take Responsibility for Your Life
PART IV - Guiding Beliefs
Things You May Have Been Taught That Are False
Things You May Not Have Been Taught That Are True
Updating Limiting Guiding Beliefs
PART V - Ways to Make Positive Changes
Change Negative Self-Talk
Creative Visualization
Create a Support System
Update Guiding Beliefs
Journal Writing
Practice Self-Care
Grow Spiritually
Affirmations
PART VI - Tying It All Together
Summary of Ways to Build Self-Esteem
Symptoms of High Self-Esteem
To Summarize
3
Introduction
It is almost universal to have issues with appreciating our innate goodness
and worth. This book will expand your awareness by presenting many simple, yet
deep, concepts and techniques to help you change how you feel about yourself and
thus improve your experiences of life. It starts with your mind. When you
consciously change your thinking, it impacts how you feel and consequently affects
your choice of actions.
Much of our self-esteem is unconscious to us. Without knowing it, we
repeat patterns and beliefs that were common in our childhood, both from society
and from our family of origin. Many of the beliefs passed on to us are not the total
truth. In fact, many are false, yet still influence us today, and many perpetuate low
self-esteem. People with low self-esteem get random results in life because there is
little responsibility taken for what happens to them. They feel that these
circumstances are the effect of other people's moods and behaviors and outside
circumstances. They keep repeating unwise habits, patterns, beliefs, and attitudes
without much thought. Like a cork bobbing up and down in the ocean, people who
suffer from low self-esteem are bounced around in life. Living this way seems
normal because friends and family live the same way. There is limited power of
aware choice, so it is common to feel powerless, like a victim of life's
circumstances.
Each of us alone must take charge of our individual lives and determine the
limiting patterns from which we want to free ourselves. It is empowering to know
yourself and grow in awareness. Where do you start? It is helpful to observe
yourself and think about what you see. Self-inquiry adds to the process where you
question how you are living your life, your personality, and your relationships. You
have to answer your own questions. Doing inner work becomes a way of life.
As you build your self-esteem and grow in confidence, you also grow in
your inner powers, such as feeling inner strength and having positive attitudes. You
are more able to use the power of free-will-choice. With choice, you see new
directions to take, which increases your sense of well-being, satisfaction with your
relationships, and actualizing your potential.
Even when we are seasoned travelers in self-discovery and have done much
inner work, unconscious patterns can still catch us off guard. We still grow in
awareness and it changes us. Expanded awareness more easily allows us to see our
issues and break out of old patterns; we grow in our ability to make wiser choices
to ensure better results in our futures.
Each of you can only begin to heal from where you are today. Step by step
you can gather new information by reading, taking classes, and by journaling. As
you write about your problems and issues, receive counseling, and talk to people
more aware than yourself, you receive support. You also gain insights into your
situations. Once you have more insight, support, and understanding of your issues,
you begin taking risks to change your habits, beliefs, and patterns.
Let me give an illustration from my life. One of my secrets is that I can
easily lose my power and become passive if someone is negative, critical, or
verbally rude towards me. Because I do not come from that intention, I can easily
deny that anything negative is going on. Yet, I experience many bodily sensations,
such as a knot in my stomach, a racing heartbeat, or a feeling that I want to hide
and be by myself. I now know to pay attention to my body awareness because it
clues me in that I need to spend time alone with myself to figure out what is going
on below the surface of my awareness. Later I may make a choice to confront
someone or it may simply be enough to know that I am working on changing my
passive reactions and will do it differently the next time it arises.
I remember one situation and how I dealt with it. A woman who sold my
books said she would not pay for one of the orders because she had no record of it
being delivered. My first response was to feel powerless and that I must be wrong.
I could not verbalize anything to support myself, so I quickly got off the phone. I
watched myself repeat a common pattern, backing off when a dominant person
insists they are right and wants their own way at the expense of mine. I do not like
power struggles, so early in life I learned to retreat. Being the adult that I am now, I
knew I did nothing wrong and that I must stand up for myself in order to get paid.
What did I do next? I spent time by myself to identify what I was feeling: taken
advantage of and angry. I figured out a couple of limiting guiding beliefs that I
needed to update. One such belief was, It is safer to withdraw when another is
angry because I am unable to find my voice. I changed it to, I speak my truth and
stand up for myself even if I feel fearful and the other person gets angry. I then
went through my last year's records to find the UPS slip and track down when it
was delivered and who had signed for it. In this case, it was fairly easy to back
myself with data. It was difficult for me, however, to call the woman back and tell
her the details which proved I was right. I felt short of breath and anxious as I
dialed the number, just as I did as a child. I continued saying supportive, positive
things to this inner child of the past, "You can confront this woman, you haven't
done anything wrong. Take some deep, slow breaths and feel your inner strength."
I ended up making the call, confronting politely, and getting paid.
Later, I continued my inner work. I set aside time to think about myself and
this situation, journaling, saying affirmations to myself, and updating more limited
thinking patterns. This empowered me and got me back on track, into my adult
self. Clues to why I had this fearful, passive response were gained by looking at
how my parents communicated, handled conflict, disciplined me, and how they
dealt with the strong emotion of anger. I am not about blaming my parents; after all
they had parents too. I also am a parent and had good intentions; even if some of
the time I passed on negative stuff to my children. It serves no one to blame
another for our problems; in fact that attitude actually keeps us stuck being a victim
and maintaining our low self-esteem. The responsibility and power for healing and
changing patterns, beliefs, and behaviors resides within each of us today.
When new to self-discovery and self-inquiry, it is not easy for us to look at
our family of origin as contributing to some of our problems. Why? It is usually
many little things from childhood that affect us as an adult. It is common to
discount the effect of the past by saying things to ourselves like, What right do I
have to complain when other people have it so much worse?
In observing myself, I noticed that many times I resonated with the pain of
someone who had experienced blatant traumas. Over time I learned that when we
over-identify with another's pain, we have hidden pain within ourselves. I learned
to feel and address the emotional pain within myself, in spite of the fact that my
childhood looked so much better. Obviously, there was more pain in my family
system than met the eye, and it affected me very deeply.
Yes, I acknowledge that there were many positives that my parents gave
me; such as, love, tremendous will power, and appreciation for my traits and
abilities. They gave me autonomy to make my own choices in life, encouragement
to be creative, and permission to think and question life. At first I felt disloyal to
my parents when looking at the things that caused pain; yet, over time I grew to
simply see the whole picture, the positive and the negative without judgment.
May this book inspire you to change your thinking, improve how you feel,
and learn new ways of living. The focus is on self-healing and taking personal
responsibility for your own life. Taking positive risks will help you begin clearing
away unwanted patterns and behaviors and you will grow to uncover your true
nature, discovering your spiritual essence. Who you really are is so much bigger
than the family and issues into which you were born. You have the power to get
back to basics, being your true Self.
Let us begin with the Acorn Analogy on the following page which summarizes the
teachings of this book.
Fortunate Blessings,
Suzanne
Score
Self-Esteem Statements
_____1. I like and accept myself as I am right now, today, even as I grow and evolve.
_____2. I am worthy simply for who I am, not what I do. I do not have to earn my
worthiness.
_____3. I get my needs met before meeting the wants of others. I balance my needs with
those of my partner and family.
_____4. I easily release negative feelings from others judgments and focus instead on
living my life with integrity and to the best of my abilities.
_____5. I always tell myself the truth about what I am feeling.
_____6. I am incomparable and stop comparing myself with other people.
_____7. I feel of equal value to other people, regardless of my performance, looks, IQ,
achievements, or possessions.
_____8. I am my own authority. I make decisions with the intention of furthering my own
and others best interests.
_____9. I learn and grow from my mistakes rather than deny them or use them to confirm
my unworthiness.
____10. I stop my critical self-talk and replace it with a nurturing, kind, encouraging
voice.
10
11
12
15
and
and
and
16
Liking yourself.
Knowing yourself and only trying to be you.
Being respectful and kind to yourself and others.
Accepting yourself even if you want some parts of you
changed.
Add to this list by observing yourself and the people around you.
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Living in fear.
18
Over- or under-eating.
19
Thinking you are better than someone who differs from you.
Needing to be right.
20
Crying a lot.
21
Not updating the beliefs and values that were handed to you
from childhood.
Believing you are a victim of life and do not have any power to
improve things.
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2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
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Affirmation:
I build my good feelings by looking within
and connecting with my true Self.
3. Stop Value-Judging Yourself
Being judgmental towards yourself or another lowers selfesteem. It is helpful to drop shoulds and oughts from your
vocabulary. Why? They are a form of value-judging yourself. What
good does it do to mull over in your mind what you should have done
in the past or should do in the future? You did what you did because
of your level of awareness. When you nag yourself and think you
should do something, it is more important to ask yourself what you are
or are not willing to do now. Then do it or let it go. Of course you
have to be willing to pay the consequences of your choice if you let it
go.
When you say or think to another, You should..., you really
mean, If I were you, I would... Since no two people have exactly the
same early environment, life experiences, genes, perceptions, and
beliefs about life, it is unfair to expect others to do what you would do
in their place. If you use shoulds and oughts with others, know
that you are probably doing the same thing to yourself.
When you use an I should message in your mind, your selftalk is telling you that you should feel guilty for not doing something,
which is more than likely somebody elses value system or wish for
you. If you do not have the will to carry out the I should message, it
is important to spend time with yourself, a friend, or a counselor to see
whether you really want to do the I should or not. It is important to
get in touch with the consequences of your choices and to make sure
they fit in with your value system.
It serves no purpose to beat yourself up mentally when you are
unable to do what you wish you could do, for example, put too many
of the ideas in this book into practice immediately. Reminding
yourself that you are working in that direction and that change is a
continual process can help give you patience.
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If you have a behavior that you do not like in yourself, you raise
your level of self-esteem by remembering that you are okay even if
your behavior is not. If someone close to you behaves in a manner that
is unacceptable to you, it is important to communicate that it is their
behavior you do not like and that you always love them as a person.
Practice separating YOU from what you do.
Affirmation:
I am getting to know my inner self so I wisely choose my behavior.
5. Stop Comparing Yourself to Others or to a Perfect Standard
If you do one thing today to improve your sense of well-being,
catch yourself whenever you compare yourself and stop. This happens
many times in social settings when we feel uncomfortable. However,
some people can do it alone comparing themselves to a younger
version of themselves or to a standard too high to meet. You lower
your self-esteem when you compare yourself. No one is better than
or less than anyone else.
You have only to be you. Perfection is a goal, not a standard to
measure your worthiness. If you must compare, do it only with
yourself to gauge your progress and to set goals.
Competition and comparison are part of most peoples
upbringing. Most of our schools, sports, jobs, and parenting styles are
set up this way. There is a current belief that competition and
comparison are healthy and necessary. However, the way we view
competition tends to produce low self-esteem. When you compare
yourself with someone else to get your good feelings, there will
always be a winner and a loser. Life is not a race. We all live our life
path in our own way and in our own time. Standards of excellence are
necessary to gauge progress and mastery, but are not a measurement of
our worthiness. Other people may still use competition incorrectly, but
you do not have to buy into it.
Rather than competing with others, pay attention to what your
gifts are and develop them. Everyone has at least one gift and it will
serve you to find out what yours is. It does not matter whether your
gift makes you Number One in some widely appreciated activity, or
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be unhealthy. When you become aware of your hidden needs, you will
see the conflicts that keep you stuck. Awareness gives us choices.
Take the example of wanting to be thinner. You decide to limit
sugar intake. The first couple of days you do fine, but then you find
yourself overeating sweets on the third day. Rather than shame and
blame yourself with critical mind talk, do some inner work. Observe
yourself. What motivated the binging on sugar? What are you needs
that motivated the behavior? Are any in conflict with each other? Even
though you have a need to weigh less, you find there is a deeper,
stronger need to feel comfortable. When you are stressed, do not eat
breakfast, or have an argument with a family member you discover
you reach for sweets to settle yourself down. Your needs are in
conflict. To get the results you want, you must learn how to manage
stress differently, maybe by deep breathing, not skipping meals, or
writing in a journal. To practice knowing that you are always doing
your best, remember the Acorn Analogy.
Affirmation:
I nurture myself today with awareness and good thoughts so the
new seed thoughts can grow.
7. Know You Are Worthy of Unconditional Love
It is important to learn to love yourself unconditionally in order
to feel good about yourself. (Substitute the word accept if love is not
comfortable.) Unconditional love is what the Greeks called agape love
love that has no reasons and no boundaries. It simply is love given
without an expectation of a return.
Conditional love, on the other hand, has to be earned, and there
are expectations placed on either yourself or another in order to be
loved. Examples of conditional love are: I would love myself if I
were thinner or if I had more money. I love you as long as you meet
my expectations and please me.
Being worthy cannot be earned by your accomplishments or
your behaviors. It is a gift to be accepted by you from Life, the
Creator. You are worthy because you exist it is your birthright.
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inner power to do this. Step up to the plate if you want to live the life
you are capable of living.
No one is to blame for the problems, unhappiness, or low selfesteem that you are currently experiencing not you, not your
parents, not your partner, not your children, no one. In the beginning
of opening the door to knowing and understanding yourself, it is
important to look at your past and understand the effect it has had on
you. Psychotherapy many times begins this way. Your childhood does
affect you and it is helpful to look at the family of origin. It is common
to blame parents for mistakes in childrearing and for being unaware
or hurtful. Again, I emphasize it serves no purpose to blame your
parents or anyone else. Remember that everyone is doing the best they
are capable of doing with their level of awareness, and that includes
your parents and their parents.
I am not saying to gloss over the pain and suffering you
experienced. It is important to do grief work and learn to forgive and
make peace with your parents. It can take a long time to understand
how blame keeps you stuck, or you can get it today.
Going beyond shame and guilt requires you to make peace with
every person in your life who has ever upset, betrayed, or victimized
you. You do this through love and forgiveness. Some of you may need
to spend much time in counseling sessions and writing in your journal.
Making peace with the past is an inner experience. Other people may
or may not be a part of the healing.
Genuine forgiveness is not pretending you are mature, looking
down upon the person who has wronged you, and letting them off the
hook. Instead, it is understanding how and why the other person
could do what they did. You realize you forgive them because they
really did not do anything to you. They were merely acting out their
negative life dramas and unconscious beliefs, perceptions, and
patterns. You happened to be the one in their path and were a target
for their pain and suffering. If you were not there it would be someone
else.
This is simple to explain intellectually and very difficult to
practice emotionally. You may need to release a lot of anger and pain
before getting to this place of forgiveness. It helps some people to talk
to a friend or to a counselor. Others benefit from journal writing,
meditating, or praying. When you hold on to grudges and blame, it
poisons your space. When you forgive, it frees you.
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33
argued and said mean things to one another at times, you as a child
might interpret that they were saying those mean things to you. The
younger the child, the less separation there is from the adults
emotional space. Separation from parents grows slowly from infancy
to young adulthood. You internalized much of what your parents said
to each other and took it personally because you were too young to
understand the history of their relationship, their wounds, the lack of
communication skills. You could not possibly understand the fact
unaware people project their anger onto others and feel like victims.
Unfortunately, you were at the mercy of your parents level of
awareness as a child and you automatically absorbed their reality, the
positive as well as the negative.
Looking at my own life, my mother always told me she loved
me. She was abrasive and rude to my father, however. She had her
reasons I now understand. As a child, though, I felt this incongruency
and felt she was mad at me too. I made sure I was good so she would
love me. I interpreted that love was based on conditions. As an aware
adult I have much more understanding of their relationship.
Intellectually understanding helps me heal the wounded child within
me today that internalized their dysfunctional patterns.
The good news is that even if you were not taught positive
beliefs that build sound self-esteem, you have the power today to redo
beliefs that no longer support and serve you.Notice as you read the
following section which of the ideas make you uncomfortable and
cause you to react. These are the areas to consider changing. It is not
important that you agree or disagree. Simply consider these ideas that
may be influencing some of your beliefs. I can give you clues as to
why you have blocked your ability to love yourself, however, it is
important to go slowly as you move forward making changes. It is not
wise to automatically take what I am offering without contemplation.
Move forward at your own pace and incorporate new beliefs that only
you determine are right for you at this time.
I have proven to myself that updating my beliefs makes my life
work better and I feel better about myself because of it. It did take
time, however, and I continue the process today. Whenever I am stuck,
for example, find myself in a power struggle or feel angry or hurt, I
spend time alone. Usually, I journal write to express my thoughts and
feelings and eventually figure out what is blocking me.
35
Following are ten beliefs that many people have. Some of these
may be part of your belief system. This list can help you get started.
Over time you will identify some of your own false truths or beliefs.
Your job is to explore outside your frame of reference to begin freeing
yourself from other peoples limiting belief systems that have
negatively affected you. Some may have prevented you from being
who you are capable of being.
Things You May Have Been Taught That Are False
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
deserve it. Yet, the opposite is true. Remember, you are worthy simply
because you exist. You cannot earn your worthiness. You have to
accept your worthiness. You can still let your needs and wants be
known, even though you think you are not perfect and, therefore, not
deserving. Close this book for a minute, close your eyes, and ask
yourself what you would like to create, attract, or experience in your
future.
The truth is that you can have whatever you truly desire, that is
if you are willing to do what it takes to create it and accept it. What
you are willing and able to accept is based on your attitudes and
guiding beliefs about deserving. Therefore, if you have been taught
that you cannot get what you want in life, whether it is happiness,
respect, a loving relationship, a dynamic job you love using your
talents, etc., begin a correction at the guiding-belief level. Start with
allowing yourself to accept that you can have what you ask for. At the
very least, consider the possibility of receiving what you desire. Some
people are manifesting the things they desire and you deserve to be
one of them.
When I become conscious of something I want to experience,
express, own, or become, I first let it be a possibility. Sometimes I talk
myself out of it by stating why I cant have it or dont deserve it. Then,
I begin talking back to this voice. I ask myself why I want this and
how my life will be different. Is it worth working or striving for? Can I
see in my mind that I will enjoy it in the future? Is it possible I would
be burdened by it?
Once Ive determined I want something and would receive value
from creating it, I begin talking to myself again. For example, when I
went to graduate school, I heard people say, Dont go into
counseling, the field is flooded. Its so competitive. You cant get a
decent job without a doctoral degree. But when I decided a
counseling career was a possibility and I wanted it, I said things to
myself such as, Even if there is a shortage of jobs, I may as well be
one of the counselors who finds one. If anyone can find a job with just
a masters degree, I will. It is important to know yourself and what
your needs are. Begin getting your true needs met and then move
towards creating what you want. Consider going deeper than material
needs and wants.
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38
and what the other person can or is willing to do does not always
match up. Again, be realistic.
When in a relationship and you find that you have expectations,
and we all do, then communicate to the other person what you need
and want. Ask, then let go of whether the other person can meet your
expectations. Sometimes they can and sometimes they cannot. It is
necessary to listen to what their needs and desires are, as well as their
expectations. This opens communication. The bottom line is that you
must learn to accept the reality of the situation. Some things cannot be
changed just by expecting the change. When you have needs and
wants dependent on another, you are co-creating this reality with that
person. If I want to create something in my life that only involves me,
like a more fit body or a new job, I call the shots and take full
responsibility. However, when what I want involves another person, I
must share the responsibility for creating, which requires taking the
other persons reality (needs, wants, perceptions, or goals) into
consideration.
3. Get your wants met before your needs. (False)
In our society there is heavy emphasis on material measures of
happiness. Often you are trapped into achieving or trying to get some
object when what you really want is to be nurtured emotionally or
spiritually. Rather than a new dress or a new car or eating sweets, what
you may need is attention. You may just need someone to care about
you, to listen to you, and to enjoy you. Or you may need direction in
life in order to feel a sense of purpose. Your needs must be met before
you can feel good. The next time you are driven to eat when you are
not hungry or buy something on impulse, stop and ask yourself what
you really need.
It is important to get in touch with your true needs. You then
can take responsibility for meeting them. Taking risks is in order. If,
for example, you are lonely or need people to talk to and to care about
you, it would be helpful to be more social. Consider joining a group.
Possibilities include attending church and joining in their activities,
taking classes, or volunteering. Or, maybe you are at the other end of
the continuum and would benefit from dropping some of your
activities and setting time aside for meditation and inner work. Either
39
way you must take the time to discover what you truly need in your
life.
4. You are a victim. (False)
If you have not learned you are powerful and are creating your
life, then you may believe that things just happen to you randomly.
You may feel there is nothing you can do to change negative situations
in your life. You are a victim. This is how much of the world thinks.
I encourage you to take an honest look at how you are reliving
your childhood patterns that your parents modeled to you. When you
were little, you did not have the power that you do today as an adult.
When you were dependent and helpless you couldnt take care of
yourself, or leave, or get help. You are grown up now and you can
make choices to support yourself. If you know this and cannot put into
practice what is healthy and right for you, then give yourself a gift.
Get professional help.
5. You have to go to church to have a good relationship with God.
(False)
Actually, this is one of many beliefs you may have learned from
good-intentioned religious teachings. It can be very fearful for some of
you to question religious beliefs. You may have experienced a period
of guilt if you separated from early religious teachings in your life.
The higher the degree of autonomy that your early upbringing
encouraged, which gave you permission to question and explore, the
lower the degree of guilt you will feel when exploring outside of your
early experiences.
You formed many of your beliefs and opinions about God by
how you were treated by the authority figures in your life, mainly your
parents. As an adult it may be time to explore the difference between
spirituality and religion.
It is of primary importance to develop a personal relationship
with God, the Universe, the Source, or Universal Mind, whatever term
you prefer to use, on the journey to finding your true Self. This needs
to take place regardless of your beliefs about God or religion. To know
that there is a power greater than yourself is mandatory if you are to
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truly feel good about yourself, because your true power to heal and
transform involves knowing you are a needed, important part of Life.
This power exists all the time and does not depend upon a church or
its dogma. Religious institutions and their rules were designed to serve
and lead people who needed or wanted help to know and connect with
God. If you feel you must be in a church or in a certain religion in
order to experience this power, and if you are unfilled spiritually, then
I urge you to explore, question, and experience other aspects of life.
For example, explore different religions, learn to meditate, go on a
spiritual retreat, spend time in nature, and spend time alone each day
pondering life.
A relationship with God exists whether you are conscious of it
or not. It exists twenty-four hours a day, inside or outside of a church
or system of teaching about God. The goal is to develop a personal
relationship with God.
6. You will feel good when you have the right job, mate, car,
weight, etc. (False)
You are in the perfect place, this moment, to learn your greatest
lessons. Yes, you have the power to create a better job or find a more
compatible partner; however, remember that right now is where you
are. Life is a journey and we never get THERE because there is
always a new place in which to grow. We create tomorrow by what we
focus on today. Since it is today, you must wake up and remind
yourself you are okay just the way you are. You can continue the talk
by saying things to yourself such as, I will take care of myself today.
I choose to nurture myself, pay attention to my feelings, and take a
positive risk to get my life going in a new direction. A job or partner
or new car does not make you feel good for long because you still
have to live with yourself.
Your power is in today. Love yourself right now, live with an
attitude of gratitude for what you have and you will begin to feel
better regardless of the circumstances. Prepare to create, at your own
pace, a fantastic future self!
7. Mistakes are bad. (False)
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You are in the school of life and are learning lessons daily that
move you on course toward your lifes purpose and goals. Mistakes
happen because you do not know or understand something and are
unable, at that moment, to do anything else. When you find that you
are repeating a pattern and making the same mistake over and over, it
is not that you are weak or bad, it simply means that you are unaware
of something. The discomfort of the repeated experience will
eventually give you the impetus to gather information, to try
something different, and finally to become conscious of more parts of
yourself.
Treating mistakes as opportunities to become more conscious is
a more constructive place to live than continually criticizing and
blaming yourself. You can love yourself even as you make a mistake.
Forgive yourself for not being aware of all aspects of a situation.
8. It is better to give than to receive. (False)
This spiritual teaching was for people who were takers and
unable to give. Giving and receiving are flip sides of the same coin.
Some of you need to learn to receive without feeling guilty and some
of you need to learn to give.
True unconditional giving, with no strings attached, requires
you to give from a place of being filled up emotionally and giving
from the overflow. You can receive this nurturing from Spirit if not
from another person. Some people are emotionally nurtured by nature
or animals.
What would the world be like if everyone could only give?
There would be no one to receive. Remember to balance your giving
and receiving as they are two parts of one whole.
9. Everyone is equal and has equal opportunities. (False)
The essence of each human being is equally precious. The
Universe needs each and every person to make the greater whole
complete. However, each person is different. You do not have the
same genes, early environment, life experiences, or level of awareness
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Things You May Not Have Been Taught That Are True
1. You are worthy and deserving of love.
2. It is good to love yourself.
3. It is okay to make mistakes and not be perfect.
4. Feelings are good.
5. Use your talents.
6. All behavior makes sense.
7. People are your mirrors.
8. You create your own life and you are responsible
for yourself.
List some of your own.
1. You are worthy and deserving of love.
You may have been taught that you are unworthy and that you
have to earn your worthiness. Even some religious teachings reinforce
this state of conditional love. If your home, community, or church
taught you that you do not count and that you are unlovable until
proven lovable, this concept may be difficult for you to accept. Know
that there are religions and people in the world today who teach the
opposite. Remember, you are innately good and worthy of love. To
reach this realization within yourself, it may be helpful to study and
contemplate the teachings of other philosophies and religions. You
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meet your needs in a healthy way. Then you will be less surprised by
unexpected behaviors and reactions.
Begin by seeking insight into your needs, not focusing on your
behaviors. This requires inner time and is much better than being stuck
blaming yourself over and over for unwanted behavior. Journal
writing helps me when I am unaware of a part of myself; I simply
begin writing and see what comes out. The more aware you become
of your real needs, the easier it is to understand and to change your
unwanted behaviors. You have to let go of superficial needs that have
gotten you off track in life.
All behavior makes sense when you find out what needs are
motivating you. When you identify the real needs, you have more
power to achieve the things you say you want. You then make positive
choices about how to get those needs met. Eventually you are
pleasantly surprised that the negative behaviors fade. Again, it is
necessary to see your behavior as separate from the essence of you, a
person growing in awareness.
7. People are your mirrors.
If you like or dislike another persons behavior, attitudes,
beliefs, traits, etc., it may be because they reflect a part of you that you
probably hide from yourself. Another name for mirroring is projection,
a psychological defense mechanism where we defend ourselves from
ourselves. We have an image of ourselves and are uncomfortable with
traits, habits, attitudes, and beliefs that do not fit into this image. It
then shows up as things we are uncomfortable with or dislike in
others.
Projections can be positive, as well as negative things we
disown. How do they get started? At sometime in our lives, we made
decisions or judgments that certain behaviors, feelings, and attitudes
were not okay to have. We then denied and suppressed that part of
ourselves to avoid facing and dealing with it. Usually, it is the
negative or bad labels that can be real eye openers to discover lurk
in our unconscious side. We all have disowned parts of ourselves; the
psychologist Carl Jung called this, the Shadow. If you choose to
become a more aware person, then it is important to take the time to
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fix, change, improve, or to take away pain. In other words, each person
is responsible for his or her own life. The best way to help another is
to work on yourself because you have an effect on those around you.
The higher your self-care, self-respect, and self-esteem the more
positive your influence is on others.
Updating Limiting Guiding Beliefs
In this section we will learn how to take beliefs guiding our
lives in a negative way and update them. Many people have an
overriding belief that says, I am unworthy. The first step in erasing
such a belief from your consciousness is to change it. Turn it around
into healing affirmations, such as:
I am worthy because I am alive; I do not have to earn my worthiness.
I care about myself.
I accept myself regardless of what other people think or feel about me.
I feel loving toward myself.
The corrected, updated beliefs are perfect to use as affirmations,
positive statements to say to yourself. Affirmations override negative
self-talk and over time become part of your thinking. Say your updated
affirmations to yourself, often, out loud if possible, until they feel true
for you. It may be helpful to write them on 3 x 5 cards and place them
around the house, too.
Now, it is time to specifically work on your guiding beliefs. Get
some paper and a pen. Allow this section to trigger your thinking. As
you read, write down your beliefs as you become aware of them. It is
okay to start with the ones presented here. There are, however,
thousands of them in your mind, that over time you will slowly
identify. Your job is to update old, unhealthy, limiting beliefs with
new healthier ones as you discover them.
Examples of Limiting Beliefs and Updated Beliefs
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Limiting = L
Updated = U
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Add power to the things you want in life. Use visualization for
creating all positive changes, from confidence and inner peace, to
finding a job or life partner.
Visualizations are pictures that you see in your mind. Some
people see clear visual pictures when they close their eyes and some
do not. Some people are inclined to be more auditory (sense through
hearing), and others are more kinesthetic (sense in terms of feeling).
Those of you who are not visual can still visualize by closing
your eyes and sensing what you are creating in your mind. Practice a
minute. Close your eyes and sense the difference between your car and
your neighbors car or between an apple and a pear. The impression in
your mind is visualization, whether you see the cars or fruit clearly or
not.
Consciously working with visualizations is similar to working
with affirmations. You are creating your future by the conscious
images you see in your mind today. Why not become aware of them
and have them create positive realities for you!
If, for example, you want to feel confident giving a presentation
at work, picture in your mind yourself breathing deeply, smiling, and
feeling relaxed as you stand in front of your boss. The deeper you can
feel your mind picture the easier it actualizes in real life. Build your
good feelings by seeing and feeling positive mind pictures. Each of the
statements in the Self-Esteem Awareness Inventory in Part I, the
updated beliefs in Part IV, and the affirmations presented at the end of
the book are excellent seed thoughts to use for visualizations.
While you say one of the affirmations, close your eyes and
imagine what it would look like and feel like if it were already true.
This is a part of a lifestyle change. You make your beliefs and
affirmations more powerful by putting your mind behind your words
in order to create what you want. Use visualization to create anything
you want to experience in your future, to break out of old patterns, to
change how you relate to other people, to attract a relationship, or to
build your self-confidence.
For more information read, Creative Visualization: Use the
Power of Your Imagination to Create What You Want in Your Life, by
Shakti Gawain. She has a workbook too.
3. Create a Support System
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5. Keep a journal
Journal writing is a unique way to get in touch with who you
are, your thoughts, and your feelings. It is a good way to look at your
issues, solve your problems, lower your stress level, and balance
yourself emotionally. By writing about the things inside, inner healing
takes place. It eases the discomfort of containing them. Writing about
hurtful events from the past helps you make sense of the pain and
suffering that has been affecting you emotionally, many times at the
unconscious level. Journaling allows you to view these events with the
clarity of an aware, open mind and it helps you integrate them into
your total being. As you write your reactions to people and events, you
discover your patterns, thoughts, and feelings.
Writing helps you clarify your thoughts, feelings, needs, wants,
visions, values, wishes, and to set priorities. Communicating with
others improves, because it helps you get centered and clear with
yourself first. Once you know what you want and what you are feeing
and thinking, you can express yourself more easily. Writing is a
powerful way to help you begin transforming your life. It is surprising
to see insights and wisdom flow onto the paper that under normal
circumstances might be hidden from you.
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If you have never done journal writing before, try it for a month
before you judge this method of self-healing. No one will check your
grammar or spelling. This is only for you. It may motivate you to use
different colored ink pens, even calligraphy pens. You dont even have
to write in full sentences. A journal is not a sequential reporting of
events, it is to make sense only to you. Hide your journal where you
know it will be safe. If you write something and you fear it will be
read by another, send it to a friend for safe keeping or even rip it up
once youve expressed yourself.
Write for about twenty or thirty minutes at a time. Aim for five
times a week. It helps if it is at the same time of day; but, by all means,
journal even if you are not a schedule-type person. Here are some
topics to get you started:
1. List things you are proud of about yourself and things you like
about yourself.
2. Who were the people and situations that influenced your selfesteem, both positively and negatively in your past?
3. Write letters to anyone you feel angry or unforgiving toward. You
do not have to mail the letters. In fact, it might be unwise to mail
such a letter if you are feeling insecure or fearful. Wait until you
have gained some self-confidence, and then decide whether or not
to mail it or give it to the other person. It is okay to rewrite letters
that you do send.
4. Discuss three of your goals and the steps you see necessary to
achieve them.
5. What are the major themes in your life? What lessons have you
learned so far?
6. Write a list of your needs, wants, desires, goals, and values and
discuss them.
7. Record your dreams. Include how you feel about each dream
and what you think it may mean. Look for themes and patterns
in your dreams over a period of time.
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14.
teeth, hair, and skin. It is nourishing to choose colors that you like for
your clothing and home furnishings.
Take contemplation time daily to check in with yourself.
Quality time alone allows you to think, journal write, pray, meditate,
daydream, or listen to your intuition.
Another tip is to develop your interests, share your talents, or do
something creative. It feels good to express your gifts and share them
with others.
One way to care for yourself is to take care of yourself on all
levels, physically, emotionally, mentally, and spiritually. It is best to
not turn the care of yourself over to another. Enjoy the times you share
with others and the times others are able to nurture you or meet your
needs; watch the tendency, however, to set yourself up for
disappointment with expectations. The following are some ways to
nurture yourself:
Physical Ways
Take a walk
Ride a bike
Exercise at a gym
Practice yoga
Take a bath
Stretch to music
Take a course in
tai chi, water aerobics,
or Pilates exercise
Take a nap
Get a massage
Emotional Ways
Deep breathe
Listen to music
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Hug someone
Write a letter
Smile at a stranger
Acknowledge yourself
Mental Ways
Say an affirmation
Journal write
Make a to do list
Write a poem
Spiritual Ways
Connect with nature
Meditate or Pray
Practice unconditional
love and forgiveness
Listen
7. Grow Spiritually
This book teaches you how to empower yourself, giving many
ideas and techniques to heal low self-esteem. Now, I will emphasize
the importance of the spiritual aspect of healing self-esteem issues.
We can do all the right techniques, correct our guiding beliefs and
self-talk, journal write, heal our inner child of the past, and still have
an empty feeling. We must at some point develop a personal
relationship with the Source of our being to truly heal our self-esteem
problems. What you call the Higher Power, God, Universal Mind, the
Creator, etc., is not important. It is important to build a personal
relationship with the Source and receive the gift and grace of
Unconditional Love.
There are many ways to develop a personal relationship with
your Higher Power. Some find being in nature builds connectedness,
other people meditate, pray, read inspiring books, or attend a church,
temple, or mosque. What matters is the direct experience of healing
that comes from allowing this spiritual power to unfold in your life.
When disconnected from Spirit, it feels as if there are two parts
of ourselves. One is the part of us living our day-to-day life on Earth
with the little self, ego, or personality, struggling to find our way. The
other is the spiritual part of us that is hard to grasp, touch, or
experience with our five senses. Call this the Higher Self, Soul, or
Transpersonal Self. We may know this spiritual part is there, but not
have a direct experience of it. Instead, we get caught in the pain of our
conditioned personality and feel like a child, needing something, but
we do not know what. Our inner child, who may have experienced
pain and suffering, dominates our reality and we feel a split from our
Spirit. In reality, there is no split; the paradox is that we are one. Until
we remember and are able to experience this oneness, it seems as if
there is a separation or split within us, keeping us separate from
others.
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8. Say Affirmations
A powerful tool to override negative self-talk and guiding
beliefs is to say affirmations to yourself daily. On the following pages
are affirmations that build self-esteem. Say the statements over and
over, out loud, with feeling until you feel like each affirmation is true
for YOU. Earlier I suggested, you might read the affirmations into a
tape recorder and listen to your tape while you are relaxing or going to
sleep at night.
I unconditionally love myself and others.
Expect no one to unconditionally love
you. You must learn to do it for
yourself by connecting to the
spiritual essence within you.
I am my own authority.
When you are willing to pay the
consequences of your choices,
both positive and negative, you
become responsible for yourself.
Notice that you pay the consequences
anyway, so why turn your power over
to another?
I am accepting of myself when I make mistakes.
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You are responsible for your life, your choices (or lack of
them), your interpretations of people and events.
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to
All behavior makes sense when you look behind the behavior
what needs are motivating you. Remember, you are like the
acorn doing your best under the conditions in which you are
growing.
Write letters to people with whom you are angry, but do not
give the letters to them.
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Smiling frequently.
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To Summarize
Happiness, self-empowerment, satisfaction in work, good
relationships, and success are all built on a foundation of healthy selfesteem. Love, respect, forgiveness, and tolerance for self and all
others are valued. Healthy self-esteem is based on an internal frame of
reference.
High Self-Esteem is a quiet, comfortable feeling of acceptance and
love for yourself as you are. It is respecting yourself while honestly
seeing your good and not-so-good qualities. High self-esteem is
characterized by congruence between inner states (beliefs, feelings,
attitudes) and outer states (behaviors, relationships, health).
Remember, most people have room to grow in the process of loving,
respecting, and accepting themselves. The first step in healing low
self-esteem is to recognize where the problems hide. Most people
benefit from changing negative self-talk and updating beliefs.
May this book inspire you to do the inner work to heal yourself and
create positive thinking patterns to live with high self-esteem. May
this book nourish you to remember your innate worth.
Final Affirmation
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ISBN 978-1-883648-16-9
E-book edition ISBN 1-883648-14-9 (ebooks.com, InnerworksPublishing.com)
Available on Amazon.coms Kindle
Enlightening Cinderella Beyond the Prince Charming Fantasy
ISBN 1-899171-58-4
E-book edition. ISBN 1-899171-58-4 (ebooks.com, InnerworksPublishing.com)
Available on Amazon.coms Kindle
Empowering You to Love Yourself revised edition
E-book edition only. ISBN 978-1883648-32-9
Available on Amazon.coms Kindle
Inner Fitness for Creating a Better You: Six Lessons for Building Greater
Awareness, High Self-Esteem, Good Relationships, and Spiritual Meaning
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Becoming the Person You Always Wanted to Marry, a book about knowing
yourself, empowering relationships, and growing spiritually
For Adolescents
Empowering Teens To Build Self-Esteem
ISBN 978-1-883648-04-1
Suzanne E. Harrill
Suzanne inspires people to build awareness and improve their lives through
counseling, coaching, writing, workshops, and public speaking. She is a natural
teacher, encourages self-discovery, and facilitates others in becoming their own
authority. Empowering clients to grow in awareness, to heal limiting patterns and
beliefs, to build a solid foundation of self-esteem, to create rich, quality
relationships, and to live with meaning and purpose are top priorities in her work
with clients. In the state of Texas Suzanne is a Licensed Professional Counselor.
She is a clinical member of The American Association for Marriage and Family
Therapy.
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Moving many times with her husband and family to other parts of the US, and
twice to Australia, provided many rich experiences with people, cultures, and
ideas. Each place received her warmly as she continued her counseling, teaching,
and public speaking.
Originally trained as an art teacher, Suzanne later earned her masters degree in
education, specializing in counseling psychology. Her experience includes
teaching adults, children, adolescents, and college students. In 1981she started her
private counseling practice and began teaching self-esteem workshops for adults.
Her first book, published in 1987, initiated her writing career. See her many works
on her website, www.InnerworksPublishing.com.
The mission statement of Innerworks is, To empower people to love and accept
themselves, to heal pain from the past, to know their purpose, and to reach their
potential individually and collectively. Suzannes books and articles on her
website do just that. They are the product of the wisdom gathered over her lifetime
and a great contribution to helping others on the journey of self-discovery and
inner healing.
Suzanne is married, has three grown daughters, is a grandmother, has a dog, and
currently lives in Colorado. She enjoys traveling, hiking in nature, watercolor
painting, creating original stained glass pieces, and spending time with her family
and friends.
Contact her through the website for personal consultations,
www.InnerworksPublishing.com
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