• Where self-esteem movement has gone wrong

    From Ilya Shambat@1:229/2 to All on Saturday, October 31, 2020 17:27:46
    From: ibshambat@gmail.com

    The main claim of the self-esteem movement is that if you feel good about yourself you will be a good person, and if you feel badly about yourself you will be a bad person. This claim is completely wrong. What you are as a person has nothing to do with
    how you feel about yourself. What you are as a person is about what you feel about – and how you are treating - others. If I feel good about myself but think that you are a jerk, I will not be all that good to you however I feel about myself.

    If good self-esteem made good people and bad self-esteem made bad people, then in all the cultures in the world where self-esteem was not encouraged nobody could be good. And of course there have been good people everywhere. A woman from World War II
    generation told me that self-esteem used to be called conceit. Very few people think that her generation made bad people. In fact it is one of the most respected generations in history.

    In fact a case can be made that there should be an expected negative correlation between self-esteem and personal qualities. If someone has higher standards for himself, he will have more trouble meeting them than someone who has lower standards for
    himself. The person with lower standards will have higher self-esteem; the person with higher standards will have better personal qualities. In this situation, rewarding self-esteem creates a reverse set of incentives. People with lower standards win;
    people with higher standards lose. And that makes the world worse, and it also makes people worse.

    I had a friend from India who told me that she had low self-esteem and that for
    that reason she was helping people. I told her that it may not have anything to
    do with self-esteem at all. I told her that it may be instead her education and
    her values.
    She found that insight useful. I do not know whether or not it did anything for
    or against her self-esteem, but it did things to allow her to see the rightfulness in her actions.

    I take issue when good things are presented as bad things. Being willing to help the next person is one of the best traits that one can have, and it is completely wrong to mistake it as low self-esteem or any other kind of psychopathology. The same is
    the case with romantic love and any number of other things.

    So no, self-esteem does not make good people, nor does lack of it make bad people. What matters is not what you feel about yourself, but what you actually
    are. Do not strive to feel good about yourself. Strive to be good for real. And
    then there will be
    more to esteem.

    https://sites.google.com/site/ilyashambatthought

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)