Low Self-Esteem in Teens: Essential Steps to Heal

A young adult muslim young adult writing a positive note on a sticky on their mirror, representing daily affirmation practices for low self-esteem in teens
A teen sitting alone looking down, representing the weight of low self-esteem in teens

Ever Look in the Mirror and Feel Like You Just Are Not Enough?

Low self-esteem in teens shows up in so many quiet, painful ways. Not attractive enough. Not smart enough. Not lovable enough. Like no matter what you do, you are constantly letting someone down. And the ones who hurt the most to disappoint? They are not even other people. They are you.

Maybe you carry guilt for things you said or did not say. Shame for who you are or who you think you should be. And somewhere along the way, you started believing that your worth is tied to how well you perform, how others see you, and whether or not someone chooses you.

But here is what Jessica Davis wants you to hear today. You are worthy of love. You are allowed to take up space. And you deserve kindness, especially from yourself.

In Episode 7 of the Block Out the Noise podcast, licensed therapist and mindset coach Jessica Davis gets honest about what low self-esteem really feels like and walks you through two practical tools to help you start rebuilding your relationship with yourself — not someday, but right now.

👇 Here is what we will cover. Jump to whatever you need most or scroll through at your own pace.



What Low Self-Esteem Actually Does to You

A teen sitting alone looking down, representing the weight of low self-esteem in teens

Have you ever had a moment where you felt okay about yourself, and then one thing happened and everything shifted?

A breakup. A bad grade. A disappointed parent. A comment from someone you trusted. And suddenly that small crack of self-doubt turned into a flood.

Does any of this sound familiar?

  • Telling yourself why am I like this after a mistake
  • Feeling like everyone else is doing better than you
  • Replaying something you said and cringing for hours afterward
  • Feeling guilty without being totally sure what you did wrong
  • Stopping yourself from trying something because you already know you will fail

If you nodded at any of those, you are not alone. Jessica hears versions of these thoughts from clients every single day.

“Self-love feels easy when things are going well. But the second life knocks you down, everything shifts.” — Jessica Davis

A bad grade hits. A teacher criticizes your work. Someone you care about pulls away. And suddenly you stop recognizing the parts of yourself you used to love. Instead of fighting for those parts, you start abandoning them.

That is what low self-esteem does. It does not announce itself loudly. It whispers. And it whispers so often that eventually you stop questioning whether what it is saying is even true.


The Lie Anxiety and Self-Doubt Want You to Believe

Here is the trap. When self-esteem takes a hit, the brain starts looking for evidence to confirm the story. You become a human highlight reel of everything that has ever gone wrong. Every mistake, every rejection, every moment you did not measure up gets filed and replayed.

And the story becomes: this is just who I am.

But Jessica pushes back hard on that. What you feel about yourself right now is not a fact. It is a story that has been shaped by hard moments, other people’s opinions, and a nervous system trying to protect you.

Anxiety and self-doubt thrive when you believe the lie that your worth is conditional. That you have to earn love, prove your value, or perform your way to being enough.

The truth that Jessica comes back to in this episode is something said by Uta, a quote she keeps close: “You yourself, as much as anybody in the entire universe, deserve love and affection.”

Not when you have done enough. Not when you have met everyone’s expectations. As much as anybody. Right now. As you are.


Step One: Show Up for Yourself Like a Partner Would

This is where Jessica gets practical. And it starts with a question that might stop you in your tracks.

If you were in a healthy, loving relationship, what would you want that person to do for you? What would you want them to say? How would you want them to treat you?

Now ask yourself: are you doing any of those things for yourself?

Most people with low self-esteem have never thought about it that way. They are so focused on being enough for everyone else that the relationship with themselves gets completely neglected.

Jessica encourages a simple shift. Start treating yourself the way you would treat someone you genuinely love.

  • Say kind things to yourself, even small ones
  • Take yourself for a walk, a coffee, a quiet moment with music you love
  • Spend time on hobbies that matter to you, even if nobody else gets it
  • Talk to yourself the way you would talk to a friend going through something hard

One of Jessica’s clients described it like this: she had spent years waiting for someone else to make her feel worthy. When she started doing small things for herself, not grand gestures but consistent, gentle ones, she said it was the first time she had felt genuinely cared for in years. The person caring for her was herself.

“I truly believe when you start to really love yourself, it makes it easier for others to love you too. If you don’t like who you are, how can you expect others to? And how can you know what real love is if you don’t know how to love yourself?” — Jessica Davis

This is not about being selfish. It is about building a foundation. When you know how to love yourself, you stop accepting less than you deserve from everyone around you. You can tell the difference between what is and is not love because you already know what it feels like from the inside.


Step Two: Turn Affirmations Into Action

A young adult muslim young adult writing a positive note on a sticky on their mirror, representing daily affirmation practices for low self-esteem in teens

A lot of people roll their eyes at affirmations. Jessica gets it. Saying words that do not feel true yet can feel hollow or even embarrassing. But here is the difference between affirmations that work and ones that do not.

The ones that work are ones you see, not just say.

This idea came from Jessica’s intern Brooke, and Jessica loved it enough to share it in the episode. Take one affirmation or quote that actually means something to you. Something like I am enough just as I am. Then make it impossible to ignore.

  • Set it as your phone lock screen
  • Make it the title of your morning alarm
  • Write it on your mirror in a marker
  • Record yourself saying it and play it back when anxiety shows up

Here is why this works. The brain responds to repetition. When you see the same message every morning before your brain has had time to argue with it, something starts to shift. The words stop feeling foreign. They start becoming part of your inner voice.

“Be the voice that builds you back up, not breaks you down. Over time, it starts to feel true.” — Jessica Davis

One teen Jessica worked with had spent years with an inner voice that was relentlessly critical. She started small — one sticky note on her bathroom mirror. Within a few weeks, she had added three more. She said it felt silly at first. Then one morning she woke up, read them, and realized she actually believed one of them. That was the beginning.

You do not have to believe every word of an affirmation the first time you say it. You just have to keep showing it to yourself. The belief follows the repetition.


A Question Worth Sitting With

Before you move on, Jessica leaves listeners with two reflection prompts that are worth pausing on.

What is one way you have been hard on yourself lately?

And then: what is one thing you could do today to be a little more loving toward yourself?

It does not have to be big. Could you forgive yourself for something? Write yourself a kind note? Give yourself permission to rest without guilt?

Self-love does not always show up as a grand gesture. Sometimes it is just a choice you make in the middle of the chaos to be a little gentler with yourself than you were yesterday.

You alone are enough. You have nothing to prove to anybody. — Maya Angelou


Key Takeaways

  • Low self-esteem in teens often grows quietly through repeated hard moments, not one single event
  • The belief that your worth is tied to your performance or other people’s approval is a story, not a fact
  • Showing up for yourself the way a loving partner would is a real and powerful practice
  • Affirmations work best when you see them every day, not just say them once
  • Self-love is not a feeling you wait for. It is a habit you build through small, consistent acts of kindness toward yourself
  • You do not have to believe you are enough yet. You just have to keep showing yourself that message until you do

Topics Covered in This Episode

  • What low self-esteem in teens actually feels like day to day
  • How anxiety and self-doubt create a loop that reinforces negative beliefs
  • Why your worth is not tied to performance, approval, or anyone choosing you
  • Step one: treating yourself the way you would treat someone you genuinely love
  • Step two: turning affirmations into visual, daily practices that shift your inner voice
  • Reflection prompts to help you start practicing self-love today

Want something to hold onto? The free Anxiety Survival Toolkit is packed with practical tools for when self-doubt and anxiety start taking over. It was made for exactly these moments.

Download it free here


Listen to the Full Episode

This post gives you the tools, but Jessica’s voice, warmth, and honesty in this episode hit differently when you actually hear them. Listen to Episode 7 of Block Out the Noise and grab the free Anxiety Survival Toolkit while you are there.


Final Thoughts: You Were Always Enough

Low self-esteem has a way of making you feel like your worth is something you have to earn. Like there is a version of you that deserves love and you just have not gotten there yet.

But that is not how worth works. It was never conditional. It never required you to perform, to be chosen, or to get it all right. It has always been there — underneath every mistake, every hard season, every moment you did not measure up to someone else’s idea of enough.

Jessica closes this episode with Maya Angelou’s words, and they are worth sitting with: You alone are enough. You have nothing to prove to anybody.

Not at your best. Not when everything is going well. Right now. As you are.

If this episode reminded you of your worth, your value, or your voice, pass it on to someone who needs that same reminder today. And subscribe to Block Out the Noise so you do not miss what is coming next.

Until next time —

Keep moving forward. Trust yourself.

And never forget: You have what it takes to block out the noise.

Low self-esteem in teens rarely comes from one single event. It builds over time through repeated experiences of feeling criticized, rejected, not chosen, or not good enough. Academic pressure, social comparison, difficult family dynamics, and anxiety all contribute. According to the Jed Foundation, low self-esteem is one of the most common underlying factors in teen mental health struggles, and it is also one of the most treatable. Understanding where it comes from is the first step to changing it.

Everyone goes through hard seasons where they feel less confident or more self-critical. The difference with low self-esteem is that the negative self-talk is consistent and pervasive — it shows up across many areas of your life and feels like a core belief rather than a passing thought. If you regularly feel unworthy, unlovable, or like a burden regardless of what is happening around you, that is worth paying attention to and talking to someone about.

They can overlap but they are not the same thing. Low self-esteem is a belief system — a pattern of negative thoughts about your own worth and value. Depression is a clinical condition that affects mood, energy, sleep, and daily functioning. Low self-esteem can contribute to depression, and depression can make self-esteem worse. If you are experiencing persistent sadness, hopelessness, or loss of interest in things you used to enjoy alongside low self-esteem, please reach out to a therapist. If you are in Illinois, Davis-Smith Mental Health works specifically with teens and young adults.

Yes, but how you use them matters. Saying an affirmation once and expecting to believe it does not work. What works is seeing and repeating the same message consistently over time until your brain starts to internalize it. This is backed by what we know about neuroplasticity — the brain can form new patterns through repetition. The key is making affirmations visual and daily, not just something you say once in the mirror and forget.

The Anxiety Survival Toolkit is a free resource created by Jessica Davis, filled with practical tools for when anxiety and self-doubt take over. It is designed for the real moments — when you are spiraling, when your inner critic is loud, when you need something concrete to reach for. You can download it for free at blockoutthenoisepodcast.com/anxiety-survival-toolkit.

That is incredibly common, and it does not mean you are broken or that it will never work. Self-love is not a switch you flip — it is a practice you build, slowly and imperfectly. Jessica recommends starting smaller than you think you need to. One kind sentence. One boundary. One gentle choice. The consistency matters more than the size of the action. If you have been struggling for a long time and nothing seems to shift, working with a therapist can help you identify the deeper patterns keeping you stuck.

Listen without trying to fix it. One of the most powerful things you can do is make someone feel heard and not judged. Avoid minimizing their feelings with phrases like “you are so pretty, how can you feel that way” — this can actually make people feel more misunderstood. Instead, ask questions, be present, and if it feels serious, gently encourage them to talk to a trusted adult or therapist. Sharing this episode or the Anxiety Survival Toolkit can also be a low-pressure way to offer support.

Write yourself one honest, kind sentence. Not a grand affirmation you do not believe yet. Just one thing that is true and gentle. Something like: I am trying, and that matters. Or I had a hard day and I am still here. Put it somewhere you will see it tomorrow morning. That is enough for today. Self-love starts with the smallest acts of showing up for yourself — and that one counts.


This post is intended to offer support and general information, not to replace professional mental health care. If you are struggling, please reach out to a licensed therapist. If you are in crisis, contact emergency services or a local helpline. You do not have to go through it alone.

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