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You Are Not Worth It. You Just Think You Are. (Part 2)

Now the harder conversation.

Part 1 was about the culture. This part is about you specifically. The woman reading this who nodded along with the criticism of other women while quietly holding her own list of everything she cannot stand about herself.

Because that list exists. It exists for almost every woman performing online, and the items on it are remarkably consistent.

The List You Do Not Post

Pimples you cover before any camera comes out. A scar you have a practiced angle to hide. A body you are never fully at peace with, regardless of how many affirmation captions you write about it. Hair that does not behave. Teeth, you smile carefully around. A financial situation that does not match the lifestyle you project. Weight that sits in the wrong places no matter what you try. Features you compare to other women’s features in a daily private audit that would horrify anyone who knew you were doing it.

The Botox you are considering, not because you are ageing badly, but because the standard you have accepted as normal has been set by women who started injecting in their twenties. Breasts that do not match the ones the algorithm keeps showing you. The specific geography of your body that you have decided, based on what exactly, does not qualify.

This is the reality behind the “I am worth it” performance. Not confidence. A deficit so wide that the only way to manage it is to overclaim in the other direction.

Overclaiming Worth Is a Symptom Not a Solution

When a woman demands excessive material proof of a man’s interest before she has offered anything of actual substance in return, she is not operating from strength. She is operating from a place that does not believe it will be chosen on its own merits. The demands are a test, not an expression of value. A test that says: prove I am worth something, because I am not entirely sure I am.

The man who passes the test by buying the bag and booking the dinner has not confirmed her worth. He has confirmed that he will perform for access. Those are very different dynamics, and neither of them leads anywhere healthy.

Real worth does not need to be proven by someone else’s wallet. The need for that proof is the signal, not the solution.

Anxiety and Depression Do Not Disappear Behind a Good Contour

The mental health crisis running through the demographic most invested in the “I am worth it” culture is not a coincidence. Young women are experiencing anxiety and depression at rates that have no historical precedent and the relationship between social media performance, impossible beauty standards and deteriorating self-image is not subtle.

Demanding that the world treat you as infinitely valuable while privately feeling like you fall short of the standard on your own feed is an exhausting way to live. The performance requires constant maintenance. One bad photo, one unflattering angle, one morning without the full routine, and the whole scaffolding wobbles.

That is not confidence. Confidence does not wobble at an unflattering angle. That is a construction and constructions require upkeep that real self-worth never does.

There Is No Comfortable Place to Land With This

Here is where this ends because there is no resolution to hand you.

The work of building actual self-worth, the kind that does not require a filter, does not need external validation, does not collapse when the likes slow down, and does not need a man to spend money to confirm it, is unglamorous, slow and private. It does not make good content. Nobody claps for it in real time.

It requires looking at the list, the pimples, the scar, the body, the teeth and the financial reality, and deciding that none of those items disqualify you from being a person of genuine value. Not because you are worth it in the slogan sense. But because your value was never located in your appearance in the first place, and the sooner you stop building your identity there, the sooner you can build it somewhere that actually holds weight.

The uncomfortable question sitting at the end of all of this is simple. If you stripped away the makeup, the filters, the carefully managed angles, the luxury signals and the confident performance, what would be left?

That answer is the only place worth starting from

Zsolt Zsemba

Zsolt Zsemba has worn many different hats. He has been an entrepreneur, and businessman for over 30 years. Living abroad has given him many amazing experiences in life and also sparked his imagination for writing. After moving to Canada from Hungary at the age of 10 and working in a family business for a large part of his life. The switch from manufacturing to writing came surprisingly easily for him. His passion for writing began at age 12, mostly writing poetry and short stories. In 1999, the chance came to write scripts. Zsolt took some time off from his family business to write in Jakarta Indonesia for MD Entertainment. Having written dozens of soap operas and made for TV movies, in 2003 Zsolt returned to the family business once more. In 2018, he had the chance to head back to Asia once again. He took on the challenge to be the COO for MD Pictures and get back into the entertainment business. The entertainment business opened up the desire to write once more and the words began to flow onto the pages again. He decided to rewrite a book he began years ago. Organ House was reborn and is a fiction suspense novel while Scars is a young adult drama focused on life’s challenges. After the first two books, his desire to write not only became more challenging but enjoyable as well. After having several books completed he was convinced to publish them for your enjoyment. Zsolt does not tend to stay in one specific genre but tends to lean towards strong female leads and horror. Though he also has a few human interest books, he tends to write about whatever brews in his brain for a while.

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