Therapy

The Power of Positive Self-Talk

What It Is, What It Isn’t, and Why It Matters

Negative self-talk is so common that many of us barely notice it. It’s the quiet background noise of the mind: You should be further along by now. Why can’t you do this like everyone else? You always mess things up. For some people it’s an occasional visitor; for others it’s a near-constant narrator. Either way, the way we talk to ourselves shapes our emotions, our behavior, and even our sense of what’s possible in our lives.

Let’s look at the real costs of negative self-talk—and why learning a more compassionate, constructive inner voice isn’t just “feel-good fluff,” but a practical life skill.


The Hidden Costs of Negative Self-Talk

1. Living by Imaginary Standards

A lot of negative self-talk comes from comparing ourselves to standards that are unclear, unrealistic, or not even ours. We absorb ideas about success, productivity, beauty, or likability from family, culture, or social media, and then silently punish ourselves for not measuring up.

The cost? Chronic dissatisfaction. When the bar is always moving—or impossibly high—you never get to feel “enough.” Even real accomplishments feel hollow because the inner critic quickly shifts the goalposts.

2. Shame About Traits and Performance

Negative self-talk often targets stable traits (“I’m lazy,” “I’m awkward,” “I’m bad with people”) instead of specific behaviors. This turns temporary struggles into identity-level judgments.

Shame is particularly costly because it makes change harder. If you believe a flaw is who you are rather than something you do, why try? Shame also pushes people toward hiding, withdrawing, or perfectionism—none of which support growth.

3. Emotional and Physical Toll

Research consistently links harsh self-criticism with higher anxiety, depression, and stress. Your brain doesn’t fully distinguish between an external bully and an internal one. Repeated self-attacks can keep your nervous system in a mild threat state, raising stress hormones and draining emotional energy.

4. Reduced Motivation

Many people believe self-criticism keeps them accountable. In reality, it often does the opposite. When tasks are paired with self-attack, your brain learns to associate effort with pain. Procrastination and avoidance then make perfect sense—they’re protective moves.


The Benefits of Positive Self-Talk

Positive self-talk isn’t about pretending everything is great. It’s about speaking to yourself in ways that are accurate, kind, and useful.

1. Greater Resilience

When your inner voice says, That was hard, but you handled parts of it well and you can try again, setbacks become information rather than verdicts. You bounce back faster because your self-worth isn’t on the line every time.

2. Better Performance

Athletes and performers use constructive self-talk to improve focus and persistence. Statements like Stay with it, One step at a time, or You’ve done hard things before help regulate emotions and maintain effort.

3. Healthier Relationships

The way you talk to yourself often spills into how you relate to others. When you’re less harsh internally, you tend to be less defensive, less approval-seeking, and more open. Self-compassion makes room for compassion toward others.

4. A Stable Sense of Worth

Genuine positive self-talk builds worth that isn’t dependent on constant success. You become someone who can say, I value myself even while I’m growing.


Practical Strategies for Shifting Self-Talk

1. Notice and Name It

You can’t change what you don’t notice. Start by catching your inner commentary. Some people find it helpful to write down recurring phrases. Label them gently: That’s my inner critic talking.

2. Use the “Friend Test”

Ask: Would I say this to a good friend in the same situation? If not, try rephrasing.

  • From: I’m terrible at this.
  • To: I’m still learning this.

3. Aim for Believable, Not Rosy

Your brain rejects statements it knows are false. Instead of I’m amazing at everything, try I’m improving, or I can handle this step. Realistic encouragement works better than over-the-top praise.

4. Try Self-Compassion Breaks

A simple tool from self-compassion research includes three steps:

  • Mindfulness: “This is a moment of struggle.”
  • Common humanity: “Struggle is part of being human.”
  • Kindness: “May I be kind to myself here.”

This interrupts the spiral of self-attack.

5. Externalize the Critic

Some people imagine their inner critic as a character or voice separate from their core self. This can make it easier to say, Thanks for your input, but I’m choosing a different response.

6. Values-Based Self-Talk

Instead of focusing on how you feel or how you compare, focus on what matters to you.

  • I’m choosing to do this because I value growth.
  • I care about being reliable, so I’ll take one step.

This anchors your self-talk in direction, not judgment.


Tools That Can Help

  • Journaling: Track patterns in your thinking.
  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) worksheets: Help challenge distorted thoughts.
  • Mindfulness or meditation apps: Build awareness of inner dialogue.
  • Voice notes to yourself: Some people benefit from literally recording encouraging reminders.

You don’t need all of these—just one or two practiced consistently.


Genuine vs. Toxic Positive Self-Talk

It’s important to distinguish healthy positive self-talk from what might be called “toxic positivity” or narcissistic self-talk.

Genuine positive self-talk is:

  • Grounded in reality
  • Open to feedback
  • Compassionate toward self and others
  • Aimed at growth

Examples:
I have strengths and weaknesses like everyone.
I made a mistake and I can repair it.

Toxic or narcissistic self-talk is:

  • Inflated and defensive
  • Dismissive of others
  • Resistant to accountability
  • Used to prop up fragile self-esteem

Examples:
I’m better than everyone else.
Nothing is ever my fault.

The key difference is that genuine positive self-talk includes humility and responsibility. It doesn’t deny flaws; it holds them in a larger, kinder perspective.


Your inner voice is one of the few companions you have for life. It can be a harsh drill sergeant or a steady coach. Changing it doesn’t happen overnight, but small shifts matter. Each time you replace a cruel thought with a fair and supportive one, you’re not just “being nice to yourself”—you’re building a mental environment where growth is actually possible.

Therapy

Challenging Perfectionism

Learning to Be Okay with Being Human

Perfectionism often disguises itself as motivation. It whispers that we’re only as good as our latest achievement, our cleanest home, our most flawless performance. At first, it can seem like a drive toward excellence. But over time, perfectionism becomes less about doing well and more about avoiding failure — or the feeling of being “not enough.” It can keep us trapped in cycles of anxiety, self-criticism, and emotional exhaustion.

Learning to challenge perfectionism isn’t about lowering your standards; it’s about freeing yourself from the belief that you must be flawless to be worthy. It’s about learning to live, breathe, and even thrive in the presence of imperfection — your own and the world’s.


Recognize the Voice of Perfectionism

The first step is noticing when perfectionism is speaking. Its voice often sounds like:

  • “If I can’t do it perfectly, it’s not worth doing.”
  • “Everyone else is doing better than me.”
  • “I should have known better.”
  • “If I make a mistake, people will see I’m not good enough.”

Try writing these thoughts down as they arise. Seeing them on paper creates distance between you and them. These aren’t objective truths; they’re stories you’ve learned to tell yourself. Ask: Whose standards am I trying to meet? and What am I afraid would happen if I didn’t meet them?

Naming perfectionism gives you power to challenge it.


Redefine What “Good Enough” Means

Perfectionism operates on extremes — success or failure, right or wrong, perfect or worthless. Real life lives in the gray area.

To soften perfectionism’s grip, begin redefining what “good enough” looks like in your daily life. That might mean:

  • Finishing a project when it meets its purpose, not when it feels flawless.
  • Showing up to a social event even if you’re not feeling your best.
  • Sending the email even if the wording isn’t poetic.

You might even make a “Good Enough List”: write down specific examples of tasks that don’t need to be perfect — meals, chores, emails, workouts, conversations. Each time you accept “good enough,” you strengthen the muscle of self-acceptance.

Try saying to yourself:

“I can do things imperfectly and still be proud of myself.”
“Progress counts more than perfection.”
“Done is better than perfect.”

These aren’t excuses for laziness; they’re affirmations of humanity.


Build Comfort with Mistakes

Mistakes don’t define your worth — they reveal your growth edges.

When you make a mistake, try shifting from self-criticism to curiosity. Instead of “I’m so stupid,” say,

“That didn’t go the way I hoped. What can I learn from it?”

Curiosity is the antidote to shame. It transforms “I failed” into “I learned.” Over time, this practice rewires the emotional association between mistakes and self-worth. Instead of spiraling into self-rejection, you learn to meet mistakes with patience and compassion.

Another tool: imagine talking to a close friend who made the same mistake. You’d likely say, “It’s okay — you’re human. You’ll figure it out.” Try saying that to yourself, even if it feels awkward at first.

Self-talk might sound like:

“It’s safe for me to be learning.”
“I’m still growing, and that’s what matters.”
“Making mistakes doesn’t make me a failure — it makes me real.”


Practice Imperfect Action

Perfectionism thrives on delay — waiting until you feel ready, certain, or “good enough.” The antidote is imperfect action.

Choose something small: share a creative project before you think it’s ready. Try a new recipe without overplanning. Speak up even if your voice shakes. Each act of imperfect action is a quiet rebellion against perfectionism’s tyranny.

The goal isn’t to fail intentionally — it’s to act without the guarantee of perfection. Over time, you’ll build tolerance for uncertainty and learn that your worth doesn’t depend on outcomes.

You can remind yourself:

“It’s better to try imperfectly than to not try at all.”
“Every step forward counts, even if it’s messy.”

Imperfect action builds confidence through lived experience, not imagined mastery.


Develop a Kinder Inner Voice

Perfectionism often grows from an inner critic that once tried to protect you — maybe from disapproval, rejection, or shame. But as adults, we can replace that harsh voice with one that supports growth instead of fear.

Positive self-talk isn’t about empty affirmations; it’s about re-parenting the part of you that feels unsafe being imperfect.

When you notice the critic saying, “You’re not good enough,” respond gently:

“I’m doing my best, and that’s enough for today.”

When it says, “You messed up again,” try:

“It’s okay to be learning. I can still be kind to myself.”

If it says, “People won’t like you if you fail,” answer:

“I’m allowed to be real. People connect with honesty, not perfection.”

Write a few affirmations that resonate with you and keep them visible — on your phone background, a sticky note, or your mirror. Over time, your brain learns to reach for kindness first.


6. Embrace Humanity Over Performance

Perfectionism teaches us to perform — to prove we’re deserving. But connection doesn’t come from being impressive; it comes from being authentic. When you allow yourself to be imperfect, you give others permission to do the same.

Notice how your relationships feel when you drop the façade, when you say, “I don’t know,” or “I’m struggling.” Vulnerability can be deeply uncomfortable — but it’s also deeply freeing.

You might remind yourself:

“I am lovable, not because I’m perfect, but because I’m human.”


Closing Thought

Challenging perfectionism isn’t about giving up on growth — it’s about reclaiming the right to grow freely. It’s learning that your worth is inherent, not earned through flawless performance.

When you make peace with imperfection, you stop chasing a moving target and start living your real, messy, beautiful life. You begin to realize: the cracks in you were never flaws — they were openings for light to get in.

Therapy

It’s the New Year! Let’s Make New Commitments (Not Resolutions)!

Resetting Our Mental Health with Acceptance and Commitment Therapy

As the New Year dawns, many of us find ourselves reflecting on the past and looking ahead with hope. It’s a natural time for self-assessment, but instead of setting traditional resolutions—which often focus on fixing perceived flaws—the New Year offers a unique opportunity to recommit to values-driven actions that nurture our mental well-being. From an Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) perspective, this is not about striving for perfection or erasing difficulties. Instead, it’s about cultivating a meaningful life through acceptance, mindfulness, and purposeful commitments.

The Pitfall of Traditional Resolutions

Traditional New Year’s resolutions often aim for significant changes: losing weight, quitting a habit, or achieving a milestone. While these goals are well-intentioned, they often stem from a place of self-criticism or societal pressure. This approach can inadvertently set us up for feelings of failure if we don’t meet rigid expectations. Moreover, resolutions tend to focus on outcomes, which we can’t always control, rather than on processes that align with our core values.

ACT encourages us to step away from this cycle. Rather than framing the New Year as a time to fix ourselves, we can see it as an invitation to reconnect with what truly matters and to act in ways that honor our values, even when challenges arise. This shift in perspective can help reduce the burden of self-judgment and open the door to greater psychological flexibility.

Reflecting on Your Values

Values are the heart of ACT. They represent what is deeply important to us, guiding how we want to behave and what kind of person we want to be. Unlike goals, values are not something to achieve but rather qualities we bring to our actions. For example, if you value kindness, your commitment might involve being compassionate toward yourself and others, regardless of external outcomes.

To start, take a moment to reflect on the past year. Ask yourself:

  • What brought me a sense of fulfillment or connection?
  • When did I feel aligned with my values?
  • Are there areas where I’ve drifted from what matters most to me?

This exercise isn’t about judgment; it’s about noticing. From here, you can identify the values you’d like to prioritize in the coming year and consider how they might shape your mental health commitments.

Committing to New Actions

Once you’ve clarified your values, the next step is to create actionable commitments. In ACT, these are not rigid rules but flexible guides that help you move toward your values. Start small and specific. For example:

  • If you value connection, you might commit to calling a loved one weekly or joining a community group.
  • If you value growth, you might explore therapy, start journaling, or learn a new skill.
  • If you value self-care, you might schedule regular breaks or practice mindfulness for five minutes a day.

Remember, commitments are not about perfection. They’re about showing up, even when it’s hard. You might stumble—and that’s okay. Each moment offers a chance to recommit.

Practicing Acceptance and Mindfulness

A cornerstone of ACT is acceptance—the willingness to experience difficult emotions, thoughts, and sensations without struggling against them. The New Year can bring excitement but also anxiety or doubt. Practicing acceptance doesn’t mean resigning yourself to suffering; it means making space for these experiences while still moving toward your values.

Mindfulness can support this process. By staying present, you can notice when your mind wanders to self-criticism or unhelpful comparisons. Gently bring your focus back to the present and remind yourself of your values. Over time, this practice can help you build greater psychological flexibility and resilience.

Embracing the Journey

The beauty of a values-driven approach is that it transforms the New Year from a deadline for achievement into a journey of ongoing growth. It’s not about becoming someone new but about becoming more authentically you. Each step, no matter how small, is a victory when it aligns with your values.

As you step into the New Year, consider letting go of rigid resolutions and instead embrace commitments that reflect your true self. Be kind to yourself as you navigate this process. Life will continue to have its ups and downs, but by staying anchored in your values, you can create a sense of purpose and fulfillment that carries you through—not just this year, but for many years to come.

If you live in Washington State, and you would like to make an appointment, please feel free to contact me here. I’m looking forward to hearing from you.

:), Susan Reimers, JD/LICSW