In order to get good at outer game, you need inner game. This is obvious; most people on this forum would probably agree with me on this. What does inner game depend on? One thing: self-esteem. Nathaniel Branden, author of The Six Pillars of Self-Esteem, says self-esteem consists of two qualities: self-respect and self-efficacy.
Self-efficacy is the belief that you can accomplish what you want in life, that you have the resources to satisfy your needs and goals. I believe that this can change over one's life. If you suck at something, you try and try again until you get better. Then you become competent. Competence breeds confidence in a particular skill, which ultimately manifests itself as self-efficacy if these skills are genuinely important to you.
Self-respect, however, is much more static in life. Being good at something does not necessarily mean you will respect yourself. I spent most of my junior high and high school years doing two things: studying my ass off and practicing musical instruments. For three years in a row I got the highest average in my class, won piano recitals, and formed my own band headlining school coffee houses, which got me and my friends invited to parties with the popular kids.
Although these accomplishments gave me self-efficacy, they did nothing for my self-respect. I was still shy, introverted, self-hating, socially-awkward, and a complete failure with girls. Although I had formed an identity for myself as a musician and diligent student and therefore developed aspects of inner game, my self-respect remained low.
You can sit around all day in front of your mirror repeating positive affirmations and listening to hypnosis tapes, but these are all useless.
Is self-respect static? Or does self-respect depend entirely on self-efficacy? Also, is self-esteem genetic? I look at my dad and realize my self-esteem is the same as his. He is a successful doctor and bases his entire identity on this. When I asked him what he plans to do when he retires, he cantankerously told me "become an alcoholic." The stifled, emotionally-blunted relationship between him and my mom reinforces this notion for me.
At the most basic level, can self-esteem really change? A bunch of accomplishments can make you feel good about yourself temporarily, but will they affect how you genuinely value yourself at the core? In other words, is an authentic, pure inner game (pure self-esteem) possible at all?
Self-efficacy is the belief that you can accomplish what you want in life, that you have the resources to satisfy your needs and goals. I believe that this can change over one's life. If you suck at something, you try and try again until you get better. Then you become competent. Competence breeds confidence in a particular skill, which ultimately manifests itself as self-efficacy if these skills are genuinely important to you.
Self-respect, however, is much more static in life. Being good at something does not necessarily mean you will respect yourself. I spent most of my junior high and high school years doing two things: studying my ass off and practicing musical instruments. For three years in a row I got the highest average in my class, won piano recitals, and formed my own band headlining school coffee houses, which got me and my friends invited to parties with the popular kids.
Although these accomplishments gave me self-efficacy, they did nothing for my self-respect. I was still shy, introverted, self-hating, socially-awkward, and a complete failure with girls. Although I had formed an identity for myself as a musician and diligent student and therefore developed aspects of inner game, my self-respect remained low.
You can sit around all day in front of your mirror repeating positive affirmations and listening to hypnosis tapes, but these are all useless.
Is self-respect static? Or does self-respect depend entirely on self-efficacy? Also, is self-esteem genetic? I look at my dad and realize my self-esteem is the same as his. He is a successful doctor and bases his entire identity on this. When I asked him what he plans to do when he retires, he cantankerously told me "become an alcoholic." The stifled, emotionally-blunted relationship between him and my mom reinforces this notion for me.
At the most basic level, can self-esteem really change? A bunch of accomplishments can make you feel good about yourself temporarily, but will they affect how you genuinely value yourself at the core? In other words, is an authentic, pure inner game (pure self-esteem) possible at all?