Confidence & weightloss

So I've lost a fair bit of weight in the past couple of years.
But I still have no confidence/ self esteem regarding how I look...
Which is putting me down and making me question how people see/treat me.

Any tips to help build my self esteem again?
( I was picked on by my looks and weight at school when i was growing up)
I thought weightloss would help that go away but that's clearly not the case.
I'm always overthinking peoples interactions with me.

Replies

  • mndamon
    mndamon Posts: 549 Member
    When I was 20 I worried about what people thought of me.
    When I was 40 I did not care what people thought of me
    And at 60 I finally understood people aren't even thinking about me.

    First I've ever seen this, I love it.
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,234 Member
    As a woman of similar age to Riverside, I support what she's saying. It does get easier, because experience creates a different perspective. But I'm betting you'd like not to wait until your 60s to feel good about yourself. :flowerforyou:

    Like her, I think you look good in both your photos, but visibly more toned and strong in your more recent pic. Your work is paying off!

    Is there a way you can shift focus a little bit, from your appearance to your accomplishments (because you've accomplished a lot)?

    In many developed world cultures, women are even more likely than others to be seen AS our appearance, not as our total selves: Skills, accomplishments, contributions, character, and more. (I fear men are heading down that track more and more, too.)

    It's not surprising to me at all that you had hoped that a dramatic change in appearance (which you've achieved) would by itself change self esteem. Part of the issue for us, I think, that some of our cultural conditioning has led us to equate self-valuing (or valuing of others) with appearance. If anything, I think it runs the other way: Increasing self-esteem can increase the likelihood that we invest in ourselves, invest in self-improvement in all ways. (Then that can become a positive cycle, of increasing accomplishments driving increased self-esteem, which motivates us to reach for new goals.)

    I think part of the perspective that experience brings is that (speaking for myself), I realize that I value others in my life for reasons that have zero to do with how they look. Valuing people mainly for how they look would be shallow of me, wouldn't it? I can't speak for everyone, but what makes my mature self value people is things like the example they set for me, of how much a human can do, for themselves, family, others . . . the doing and being, not the visuals of appearance. Friends, it's more complicated, because I do notice that they do things for me (selfishly!), but also I appreciate and enjoy the deeper web that grows between us as we mutually help and support each other. But that's all just me.

    Working on ourselves - things like self-esteem - is hard work, in its way. There's a tendency to discount our own accomplishments. ("If I can do it, anyone could, not a big deal". But an honest look around reveals that, realistically, not everyone does do it, even if they claim they want to - whatever "it" is.)

    I'm not a big fan of self-help books and such, but this is a realm where some of that can be a thing to explore. Beyond that, there should be no stigma in looking for more personalized counseling. We hire a plumber for their knowledge and expertise when there's a problem with our pipes or water. It should be no different to utilize someone who's an expert in thought patterns, if that's where we have a thorny problem that's limiting our quality of life. (Yes, I have done that myself, though the context was not specifically a self-esteem issue.)

    I hope and believe you can work your way through this, but I know it isn't easy. I wish you good outcomes on that front!
  • cmriverside
    cmriverside Posts: 34,420 Member
    LOL Ann.

    People weren't thinking about me nearly as much as my over-inflated ego would have had me think in my twenties, so I learned The Lesson pretty young - like I said, 25-ish, so I was by no means saying that only the old are wise. It's just a saying.

    I read a bunch of self-help books and tried a little counseling too. My "enlightenment" came sort of all-at-once. I was sick and tired of trying to be what others suggested I needed to be (to them.) It's very freeing to give that up!

  • Lietchi
    Lietchi Posts: 6,841 Member
    I lost about 75lbs in total. But my confidence started increasing as soon as I started losing weight. Not because I looked better necessarily (hardly noticeable at first, and even now I'm no supermodel), but because of what I was accomplishing.
    Currently, I think my increased confidence is 50% being lighter (esthetically) and 50% from what I've achieved losing weight (consistency) and becoming that much more active.

    Self confidence is a tricky thing, it doesn't necessarily follow reality. Good advice above!
  • IzzieDizzie93
    IzzieDizzie93 Posts: 21 Member
    Thank You all,
    Honestly it's helpful, I'll definitely use those words to just help improve my mindset.

    Accomplishment wise, I haven't had anything crazy happen and maybe that's where this doubt is coming from? I need to find a hobby (which doesn't involve gym or children!) And focus on it.

    Build my own self worth and then not caring as much about what other people think.
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,234 Member
    @IzzieDizzie93: What you've achieved already in the gym absolutely is an accomplishment! (Raising good kids isn't small potatoes, either. Not everyone does it adequately, even, unfortunately.)
  • littlegreenparrot1
    littlegreenparrot1 Posts: 702 Member
    My top tip is to find a slightly over ambitious fitness goal, a really fun one. A beautiful but tough trail run, an adventure race, or an obstacle race (don't be intimidated, most people aren't racing and are just having a laugh), a long hike up a mountain, whatever.

    The important things are it will require work, but you are not completely sure you can do it, when you tell people they look at you like your nuts :D

    Work out the training plan, stick to it, then be astonished at how much you progress - the confidence from that is great. Do the event, struggle a bit and amaze yourself by completing it anyway. Because you are capable of more than you believe.

    When you achieve it the confidence boost is amazing. I may be heavier than I could be, but I'm a flipping Amazon and can kick the *kitten* of whatever I choose to do. I have a lot more faith in my own abilities and value, other people can get on board or get lost.