Self-Esteem
Share Post
Understanding Self-Esteem, it's Origins and Healing

Self-Esteem Issues
Understanding, Origins, and Healing
Self-esteem, in Pia Mellody’s model, refers to the ability to hold yourself as neither better than nor less than anyone else. Healthy esteem is a birthright, but in dysfunctional families, children often receive distorted messages that shape how they view their inherent worth.
Where It Comes From
Children develop self-esteem through consistent nurturing, boundaries, and emotional visibility within their family system. Abuse and neglect interrupt this process:
- Emotional or physical neglect teaches the child “You are not important,” leading to chronic feelings of shame or inadequacy.
- Enmeshment or over-control sends the message “Your worth comes from pleasing others,” which creates performance-based self-esteem.
- Abuse—physical, emotional, sexual, or verbal—shatters a child’s sense of being safe and lovable, leading to profound shame.
- Parentification creates a false sense of superiority or responsibility that masks deeper worthlessness.
As adults, these wounds manifest as:
- People-pleasing
- Perfectionism
- Harsh self-judgment
- Comparing oneself to others
- Feeling invisible or unworthy
- Arrogance as a defense against shame
How to Heal It
Healing self-esteem requires reconnecting with your inherent worth. Steps include:
- Recognize shame-based beliefs.
Notice “less-than” messages (“I’m not good enough”) or “better-than” defenses (“I don’t need anyone”). - Reclaim your birthright of equality.
Mellody emphasizes: No human being is more valuable than another.
This is a daily practice, not just a mindset. - Develop a compassionate internal voice.
Practice speaking to yourself the way you would to a beloved child. - Address the trauma beneath the shame.
Through therapy, somatic work, or guided inner-child re-parenting, you can release old emotional imprints. - Practice esteem-building behaviors.
Examples: setting boundaries, telling the truth, practicing moderation, and living aligned with your values.
Healing self-esteem is the foundation for repairing the other core issues. When you come from inherent worth, every area of life becomes more balanced, relational, and grounded.