Sensitivity and Self-Esteem
This sensitivity may be an attempt to train people in your life to only give you positive reinforcement, but this system is associated with negatives including:
- Other people do not feel comfortable being direct and honest with you
- Your relationships become more superficial and unrewarding
- Others do not feel like they are benefiting from the relationship
- You assign responsibility for your feelings to others instead of yourself
- Your mood, self-esteem and sensitivity continue to worsen over time
Improving Self-Esteem to Improve Sensitivity
The final two on the previous list are the most disconcerting because you will continue wasting time and resources trying to modify the behaviors or communication of others. Instead, you will be well-served to put the responsibility squarely on your own shoulders.
This may seem overwhelming or frightening at first, but if you can build consistency, you will learn to make yourself feel better than anyone else could. Additionally, permitting yourself to feel good will end the emotional rollercoaster associated with low self-esteem.
Do you want to feel better and stay better? Here’s how:
Assess Your Beliefs
Now that you have taken responsibility for your feelings and self-esteem, you can begin to retrace the steps that brought you to this place. What has damaged your self-esteem? Who were the biggest perpetrators? How long has this been the case? By understanding the roots of your beliefs, you can engage in interventions that are more likely to work and work efficiently.
Monitor Your Self-Talk
Self-talk is the conversation that you have each day with yourself. The statements that you make to yourself have a major impact on how you feel and the behaviors you perform. People with low self-esteem typically have self-talk that is centered on ideas of worthlessness, failure and pessimism. If these statements continue, you will only feel worse. There must be change at this level for progress to occur.
Limit the Views of Others
For too long, you have been placing excessive value on the opinions of others only to see your self-esteem slide. At this point, you will benefit from filtering the feedback you receive. A compliment from a friend cannot have the power to drastically improve your day, just as a criticism from a friend cannot destroy your day. What you think of yourself matters much more than the views of others.
Give Compliments
What do you like about yourself? What are you good at? What are your strengths and goals? Focusing your self-talk on positive aspects of your personality and your life will begin to change the negative flow of self-esteem. Giving yourself a compliment will feel foreign after being focused on the opinions of others for so long, but give it time. Increased compliments will trigger a chain reaction to self-talk, self-esteem, sensitivity and depression as it makes each component more desirable.
Find Pleasure
Only so much can be done in your mind. Engaging your body will boost the positive impact on self-esteem. Finding fun and pleasure in the world is possible no matter your situation. Go places and do things that you have been reluctant to do until now. You now know that the result will be worth the temporary discomfort.
It's true sensitivity is an issue connected to depression, but the link might surprise you. Rather than targeting sensitivity directly, work on your self-esteem to produce the results you seek. Along the way, take responsibility for how you feel. Doing so will place the power and control right where it belongs: in your hands.