Self-esteem is not arrogance or thinking you are better than everyone. At its core, self-esteem is the quiet sense that you are fundamentally okay, worthy of respect and care, even when you fail. The good news from decades of research is clear: self-esteem is not fixed. It can be rebuilt.
What self-esteem really is
Psychologists often describe self-esteem as your overall sense of your own worth. Healthy self-esteem is steady rather than inflated. It does not depend on being perfect or constantly winning. Instead it rests on self-respect and self-acceptance, a baseline belief that you matter regardless of your latest achievement.
Why neurodivergent people often have lower self-esteem
If you are autistic, ADHD or otherwise neurodivergent, lower self-esteem is extremely common, and it makes sense. Many neurodivergent people grow up hearing that they are too much, too sensitive, lazy or careless, when they were actually struggling with a brain wired differently. Years of masking, missed expectations and subtle exclusion teach a painful lesson: that who you are is a problem. That belief is learned, which means it can also be unlearned.
Evidence-informed ways to rebuild it
Practice self-compassion. Research by Kristin Neff and others shows that treating yourself with the kindness you would offer a friend is one of the strongest buffers for self-worth. Notice your inner critic, then answer it with warmth rather than attack.
Stack small wins. Self-esteem grows from evidence, not affirmations alone. Set tiny, achievable goals and let yourself register each one. Repeated experiences of follow-through gently rebuild trust in yourself.
Challenge the harsh inner voice. Cognitive approaches help you notice all-or-nothing and self-blaming thoughts and test them against reality. You are usually far more reasonable with others than with yourself.
Tend your basics and your people. Sleep, movement and supportive relationships all feed self-worth. Spending time with people who get you, rather than those you must perform for, is quietly powerful.
Consider therapy. A good therapist can help untangle where the negative beliefs came from and build steadier self-acceptance, especially if shame runs deep.
Be patient with yourself
Self-esteem rebuilds slowly, through many small moments of treating yourself as someone who matters. You are allowed to be a work in progress and still be worthy right now.
Sources: Rosenberg self-esteem research. | Kristin Neff self-compassion research. | Cognitive behavioural therapy literature on self-worth. Educational only, not a diagnosis.
Curious about where you stand?
Our free self-esteem test takes about 5 minutes. It is an informational screening, not a diagnosis, but it can be a kind first step toward a steadier relationship with yourself.