Learning how to improve your self-esteem wasn’t something I picked up from a book or a course.
It came from lived experience, years of getting things wrong, and slowly learning how to rebuild my relationship with myself.

I didn’t grow up confident, and I didn’t feel secure in who I was.
I was born with a facial disfigurement, and from a very young age, I learned what it felt like to be different.
That experience shaped far more of my life than I realised at the time.
When Self-Esteem Is Damaged Early in Life
When people talk about self-esteem, they often treat it like confidence. It isn’t.
Self-esteem is the way you see yourself when no one else is around. It’s the internal tone of voice you live with every day.
As a child, I was bullied throughout primary school. Being different made me a target, and over time I learned that being myself didn’t feel safe.
When that happens, self-esteem doesn’t simply disappear. It gets replaced by coping mechanisms.
Sometimes quiet ones.
Sometimes destructive ones.
How Low Self-Esteem Can Turn Into Anger
Low self-esteem doesn’t always look like insecurity on the surface.
In my case, it looked like anger.
I used physical violence at school. It got me into trouble repeatedly. But there’s an uncomfortable truth here that’s important to say out loud.
It also earned me respect.
Fear replaced confidence.
Control replaced self-worth.
At the time, it felt like survival. In reality, it laid the foundations that caused problems later in life.
When your sense of value is built on dominance or fear, you never feel settled inside yourself.
Carrying Low Self-Esteem Into Adult Life
The impact didn’t magically disappear when I grew up.
Even as an adult, I struggled with confidence, especially around relationships. Speaking to girls felt uncomfortable and exposing. I second-guessed myself far more than people realised.
On the outside, I functioned well.
On the inside, I still didn’t feel enough.
What made a difference wasn’t one big breakthrough moment.
It was consistency.
And one person who never stopped reinforcing belief in me.
My mum.
She repeated the same message over and over:
“You can do anything you want.”
At the time, I didn’t fully believe it. But the message planted something important. It gave me a counter-voice to the one tearing me down.
What Actually Helped Me Rebuild My Self-Esteem
Over time, I learned something that now sits at the heart of my coaching work.
Self-esteem is not built through positive thinking.
It’s built through behaviour.
You don’t convince yourself you’re worthy.
You prove it to yourself through action.
That insight changed everything for me, and it’s the same principle I use when helping clients rebuild their self-esteem today in my life coaching work.
The Practical Process I Use With Clients
This isn’t theory.
It’s practical, grounded, and based on real human behaviour.
Rebuilding Identity
Low self-esteem is usually tied to a damaged identity.
People don’t know who they are anymore. Or worse, they believe a version of themselves that was shaped by rejection, bullying, criticism, or shame.
The first step is honest reflection.
Who do you believe you are?
And who taught you that?
In most cases, the story doesn’t belong to the person at all.
Stopping the Internal Self-Attack
People with low self-esteem are often incredibly harsh towards themselves.
The internal dialogue is brutal.
Judging. Shaming. Punishing.
I don’t try to silence that voice with clients. I slow it down and challenge it.
A simple rule applies here:
If you wouldn’t say it to a child, it doesn’t belong in your head.
Building Self-Respect Instead of Chasing Confidence
Confidence is unstable. It rises and falls.
Self-respect is built.
It grows when you keep promises to yourself.
When you set boundaries.
When you stop people-pleasing to avoid discomfort.
Every act of self-respect strengthens self-esteem.
Every self-betrayal weakens it.
Learning to Face Discomfort
Avoidance quietly destroys self-esteem.
Every time you avoid a difficult conversation, a boundary, or a decision you know you need to make, you reinforce the belief that you can’t cope.
I help clients face discomfort gradually and safely.
Not through force, but through structure and support.
That’s how trust in yourself is rebuilt.
Letting Go of External Validation
Approval feels good, but it’s a fragile foundation.
Likes, praise, and reassurance can never replace internal stability.
Real self-esteem develops when you stop outsourcing your worth and start deciding who you are for yourself.
Why Improving Self-Esteem Changes Everything
When self-esteem improves, life gets quieter internally.
Anger loses its edge.
Anxiety softens.
Relationships become healthier.
You stop chasing respect and stop tolerating disrespect.
You’re no longer fighting yourself all the time.
When You Need Support to Rebuild Self-Esteem
Some patterns are too deeply wired to untangle alone, especially when they come from childhood experiences, bullying, or long-term identity damage.
That’s where coaching helps.
In my one-to-one life coaching work, I help people rebuild self-esteem through structured conversations, accountability, and honest reflection.
No fluff. No judgement. No pretending.
Final Thoughts
If you’ve struggled with self-esteem for most of your life, it doesn’t mean you’re broken.
It means you adapted.
Those adaptations helped you survive at one point. They just don’t serve you anymore.
Learning how to improve your self-esteem starts by understanding that and choosing, step by step, to build a better relationship with yourself.
One based on respect, not fear.
Related Resources to Improving Self-Esteem
Confidence Coaching ➡️
A practical guide to confidence coaching and how it works.
Life Coaching for Improving Self-Esteem ➡️
A premium coaching program for people who want deeper, long-term change.
Last updated: Sunday 14 December 2025