This post provides parents with easy ways to help improve and build their child's self-esteem over the summer months. Simple and fun ways are provided by blogger and therapist Emily Roberts.
Building Self Esteem
When you disconnect from your truth, your wants and desires, the things you know are good for you, then you aren't showing up for yourself, and that decreases your self-esteem. Saying "no" to your workout, pressing the snooze button, or putting up with a difficult boss, are small and yet significant ways one doesn't show up. Bigger circumstances can be staying in a dead-end job, a bad relationship, or avoiding your intuition. Ask yourself, what does the kid inside you deserve? That little 6-year old who wanted to be an astronaut, president or teacher, would you show up for him or her?
Therapist and blogger Emily Roberts explains mistakes people make when trying to be confident and simple solutions to fix them.
Therapist and HealthyPlace Blogger Emily Roberts teaches the difference between acting confident and selfish and how adjust your behaviors to improve your relationship with others and your build your self-esteem.
Therapist and Blogger Emily Roberts gives three tools to help reduce anxiety and build confidence in kids.
Learn skills to increase your confidence in a conflict and express yourself effectively.
Therapist and HealthyPlace Blogger Emily Roberts gives 5 effective tips to increase body confidence.
Therapist and HealthyPlace Blogger Emily Roberts provides 5 tips to increase self-confidence in the moment.
Learn how to reduce social anxiety and increase confidence with three tips from therapist Emily Roberts, author of the Blog Building Self-Esteem
As I write this post, I am attempting to manage a hectic work week. I am in the middle of a 45-hour intensive training, seeing clients, answering emails, and maintaining some of my social life. Is this going as planned? Hardly, but I am accepting that I am doing the best I can. This statement, or the willingness to accept that in the moment you are doing what works to be effective, given the circumstances, is a key component to maintaining a positive relationship with yourself. Beating yourself up, focusing on the “shoulds” or past and not accepting that you are trying, leads to unhealthy and low self-esteem.