Self-Respect is us sizing up who we are and what we’re about. It is the confidence we place in ourselves: That we can count on ourself to do what we intend. This is different from Self-Esteem, which is an ego-related assessment of our capabilities in principle: that of which we are ideally capable. Self-respect is our level of confidence in our ability to deliver the goods when need be.
Robin S. Dillon, in the University of Chicago’s journal Ethics, lays-out the separate categories we use to evaluate our worth in his article: “Self-respect: Moral, Emotional, Political.” Each is based on our subjective assessment regarding adherence to our yardstick as to right and wrong behavior. As such, it is possible to respect ourself morally, but not emotionally or politically.
Our Moral yardstick self-assesses our level of righteousness. Does our character measure up to what we believe constitutes an acceptable level of honesty, veracity, kindness/meanness, and appropriate sexuality? If we too often disappoint ourselves in the way we behave morally, demonstrating clear moral failings, we will not respect who and what we are in this arena.
Our Emotional yardstick is tied to our attitude, which is our general mindset regarding life and the people in it. Mindset is a framework for the attitudinal tenner or the tone of our thoughts. An ongoing stream of negative thoughts will drag down self-respect. Because we tend to get what we think about, if we have the attitude that we aren’t good enough, we probably won’t be. As Henry Ford famously put it, “Whether you think you can or you think you can’t, you’re right.”
The Political yardstick self-measures how we deal with and treat ourselves/others. How do we care for our body? How do we shape up, smell and look? Others’ negative feedback in these areas affects our self-respect. Further, psychologists believe such factors actually reveal how much we respect ourselves. Excess weight, bad hygiene, and shabby attire often point to low self-worth.
The most important aspect of the Political dimension is our self-talk. This is the intra-personal dialog inside our head telling us who and what we are. It can make us or destroy us. If our self-talk says: “Boy, you’re worthless.” “You’re a complete waste.” “You’re an idiot!” and/or “You’re a rotten person,” we are saying that we don’t respect who we are.
But what if we have a bad yardstick? What if our criteria for “measuring up” is so skewed we have no chance? Thus, it is worth asking: From whence does our internal measuring stick come? At the heart of this ongoing debate among psychologists, philosophers, and theologians is the perennial argument regarding Nature Vs. Nurture.
Nature refers to our innate (God-given) sense of worth/value and the right way to be. Whereas nurture is everything we learn from the consequences of experience. These lessons become part of our self-understanding. Growing up, it doesn’t take long to discover if we measure up because everyone keeps us informed. These four aspects are deciding factors in yardstick development:
1) The quality of the interaction with our parents. If our father is abusive and/or our mother isn’t loving, our sense of how we measure up is unlikely to be good. If, on the other hand, we have wonderful, kind, supportive parents, we’ll be off to a very good start. A key part of parenting is bestowing upon our children the belief that they do measure up.
2) Our religious teaching, which is an extension of number one (since God is the ultimate Parent), is a close second. If we’re taught that we’re wretched sinners in the hands of an angry God, we’re not likely to feel good about ourselves. But if we’re taught that God absolutely loves us for exactly who we are (because we have His nature etched upon us), we learn to feel good about who we are regardless of how life goes.
3) It has been said that life is one darned thing after another. The choices we make are often based on whether we feel like a winner or a loser. When we don’t respect our self, we are more likely to make loser-like choices. People who fail to link their behavior with its consequences, never get out of the downward spiral their lack of self-respect perpetuates.
4) If children are given impossible tasks which cause them to always fail, they will come to believe they are just not good enough. If your kindergarten teacher insists that you either understand Pythagoras or you’re stupid, your yardstick will be skewed. Importantly, the yardstick we use for self-evaluation must be reasonable. Figuring out what that metric is for us is the reason people read and learn, grow and develop.
Below, I have listed a series of questions that (when you answer), will give you an indication of how much respect you have for yourself. There is no score because self-respect is different for everyone. Further, because we tend to be oversensitive with issues that plague us, some questions will strike more of a chord than others. But if you want more self-respect, these will help:
1) What is the quality of your self-talk? Do you build yourself up or tear yourself down? When you imagine what others are saying about you, it is good or demeaning? Because life is a self-fulfilling prophesy, self-talk is the number one way to improve or destroy your every aspect. Be supportive, affirming and encouraging with yourself; always think the best!
2) Psychologists believe the care you give to the look of your body is reflective of how you feel about yourself. Looking dumpy says something about your level of self-respect. Your body’s look, shape and even its health, reflects how much you truly respect yourself.
3) The same is true for maintaining our personal space. Do you keep your room clean? Do you clean the house? Are you content to live amidst bad things and/or bad people? Care for our living quarters tells us what we subconsciously think we deserve.
4) Do you consider your word to be Gospel? Are you an honest person or only honest when convenient? Do you lie, steal, and cheat? Do you think it’s okay to do so if no one will ever find out? Do you avoid or hang with people with these character issues?
5) Do you follow through with what you decide? Can you decide to do something and then see that it gets done? Do you have the wherewithal to follow your passions, your dreams, and expectations for yourself? Can you count on yourself?
6) Can people depend on you? One way to destroy our self-respect is to keep behaving in such a way that we’re thought undependable. Every time we fail to measure up, particularly with those we respect, our self-respect sinks. It’s worth becoming dependable.
7) Can you let go of the past? If you continuously beat yourself up over past mistakes, it will negatively skew your self-respect. Dwelling on failures makes us feel bad about who and what we are. With solid self-respect, we can let go of the past because we know we’re good enough to do better in the future.
8) Do you honor your values? Can you stick to them when temptation arises? Do you make behavioral choices that reflect them? Do you believe that you are authentic? Or do you suck up to your betters while distaining people you think are beneath you?
9) Do you believe that most things in life work out for you? Or do you believe nothing never works out when you attempt an important task? Do you believe that life is on your side or that it is stacked against you?
10) Do you feel useful? A great part of self-respect comes with our feeling that we are of value to others. The pandemic has created a huge problem because those stuck on the sidelines lose respect for themselves because they are unable to feel useful. As a result, suicides are way up. If you want to respect yourself, find ways to be useful. It always works!
Self-respect is tied in with our self-image, self-esteem, self-worth and our generalized feeling of well-being. It’s about who we think we are and what we think we’re about. Do you like yourself? If you do, the chances are good that you have a healthy self-respect. If you don’t, figure out why and learn how to love who you are. Correct that problem and your life will get better, I promise!