Self-worth in a sentence as a noun

It's there that they sense some kind of unwarranted self-worth and wealth.

Startups are hard enough as it is -- for me, at least, tying my emotional self-worth closely into all that work is a really bad thing to do. Odds are you will fail.

This is gives you a powerful sense of self-worth, brings you status with your peers, and makes your parents feel like you've finally made it. And now you're graduating from undergrad.

Somehow they are less of a person, if they don't win and they judge their self-worth based on it. I am not saying that this is all, or even most, VC's, but they are out there, and you only need to cross one of them for it to make an indelible mark.

It's really important to understand the business YC is in, and to separate your self-worth from it. It's also important to not hold any negative feelings towards them, since they are merely trying to maximize their outcomes, and they know the market quite well.

People whose sense of self-worth has gone nonlinear, because when they look at their brokerage statement, they forget that, while skill was certainly a component of why they got to where they did, luck was also a huge component. Most of these people have never worked for a company that built a good product and failed anyway.

Also, in my opinion, I believe that feeling the need to save every single conversation you have fuels an over-inflated sense of self-worth, and that everything you say has value and needs to be saved. I never, ever peruse through my messages, to reminisce over an old conversation.

My father occasionally had to look after kids who had some brush up with the Law, in Italy; long story short, once you enter The System, you can kiss goodbye to any sense of respect, self-worth or personal rights.

I am sure teaching this man to code was huge for his self-worth, but there are a lot of deeper emotional issues why he is there that are probably going to take a lot of time and patience to uncover one step at a time.

Also, I suspect that most HN readers won't understand the maturity & security in one's own self-worth it takes to walk away from that level of career success, and particularly a company like Google.

I eventually began setting some ridiculously lofty goals for myself that I've failed to meet time and time again, and it's contributed heavily to my often feelings of failure and low self-worth. So how about this: Instead of rushing to do something before a completely fabricated deadline, chase opportunities with the intent of trying your best and the understanding that no one event or missed deadline renders you a failure or means that you've missed out on life.

Wonderful writing, I loved the way it circled several times around the central issue - the value of work, and I particularly liked this conclusion - much validation and reward in our society is driven by how much people are willing to pay you for your chosen work, and it's very hard to separate your self-worth and confidence from that. It's hard to reconcile when your values don't meet those of the people around you, as expressed in the salaries for various jobs, which vary wildly without much sign of reason or relation to what society ostensibly values.

Quote Examples using Self-worth

The more self-worth you derive from your previous successful outcomes, the more susceptible your ego becomes to fear of future failures. Your amygdala is telling you that you are successful already, so don't shake the boat. Tread carefully and you'll always have an excuse for why things don't work out. You'll never have to admit you just couldn't do it. The solution is to divorce your self-worth from outcomes. Instead, derive self-worth from the process.

Anonymous

Self-worth definitions

noun

the quality of being worthy of esteem or respect; "it was beneath his dignity to cheat"; "showed his true dignity when under pressure"

See also: dignity self-respect self-regard