Self Esteem therapists in Yeovil, England ENG, United Kingdom UK
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Jimi Katsis
Registered Psychotherapist, MA psych, Dip SW
Low self-esteem isn't about lacking confidence. It's about carrying a deep sense that something's fundamentally wrong with you. You might be good at your job, have people who love you, tick all the boxes—but inside, you're convinced you're not enough. That if people really knew you, they'd see through the performance.
This feeling didn't come from nowhere. Somewhere along the line, you learned that who you are isn't acceptable. Maybe you were criticized, dismissed, or had to earn approval that should have been freely given. Your nervous system learned: "I have to be perfect/invisible/useful to be okay."
We work to understand where that belief got installed and why it's still running. Not through affirmations or telling you you're great—that doesn't work because you won't believe it. Instead, we look at what happened that taught you to see yourself this way, and then we start dismantling it.
Real self-worth isn't built through positive thinking. It's built through understanding why you learned to reject yourself, then slowly learning you don't have to anymore.
27 Years Experience
Online in Yeovil, ENG England (Online Only)
Liz Frings
Counsellor/Therapist, PG Diploma Person-Centred Psychotherapy. EMDR Accredited
How Therapy Can Help with Self-Esteem -
The way you see yourself shapes everything—your relationships, your career choices, how you handle challenges, and even your overall happiness. If you struggle with low self-esteem, you're likely your own harshest critic, and that internal voice can be exhausting and limiting. The good news is that self-esteem isn't fixed—it can grow and strengthen with the right support, and therapy offers a powerful path toward seeing yourself more clearly and compassionately.
What Low Self-Esteem Looks Like
Low self-esteem goes beyond occasional self-doubt. It's a persistent negative view of yourself that might show up as:
Constant self-criticism or negative self-talk
Feeling like you're not good enough, no matter what you achieve
Difficulty accepting compliments or believing positive feedback
Comparing yourself unfavorably to others
Perfectionism and fear of failure
People-pleasing and difficulty saying no
Avoiding challenges because you assume you'll fail
Staying in unhealthy relationships because you don't think you deserve better
Feeling like an imposter in your own life
Apologizing excessively or taking blame for things that aren't your fault
Difficulty making decisions because you don't trust yourself
These patterns can hold you back from pursuing opportunities, building healthy relationships, and living authentically.
How Therapy Helps
Uncovering the Roots
Low self-esteem doesn't appear out of nowhere—it's usually built over time through experiences like childhood criticism, emotional neglect, bullying, trauma, failed relationships, or repeated disappointments. Therapy helps you understand where your negative self-view originated. This isn't about blaming others; it's about recognizing that your inner critic was learned, which means it can be unlearned.
Challenging the Inner Critic
That harsh voice in your head isn't telling you the truth—it's repeating old messages that may have never been accurate in the first place. Therapy, particularly Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), helps you identify these negative thought patterns and challenge them with evidence and compassion. You learn to question thoughts like "I'm worthless" or "I always mess things up" and replace them with more balanced, realistic perspectives.
Separating Your Worth from Your Performance
Many people tie their self-esteem to achievements, appearance, or others' approval. Therapy helps you recognize that your worth is inherent—it doesn't depend on what you do, how you look, or what others think of you. This shift from conditional to unconditional self-worth is transformative and freeing.
Processing Past Wounds
If your low self-esteem stems from trauma, abuse, or painful experiences, therapies like EMDR can help process these memories so they have less emotional power over you. When you heal the wounds that taught you to see yourself negatively, your self-esteem naturally begins to improve.
Developing Self-Compassion
Self-compassion is treating yourself with the same kindness you'd offer a good friend. Therapy helps you cultivate this gentler internal voice, recognizing that everyone makes mistakes, has flaws, and struggles sometimes—and that doesn't make you less worthy. You learn to comfort yourself rather than attack yourself when things go wrong.
Identifying Your Strengths and Values
Low self-esteem often creates tunnel vision where you only see your perceived flaws and failures. Therapy helps you take a more balanced inventory—recognizing your strengths, accomplishments, positive qualities, and the values that guide you. Many people are genuinely surprised to discover how much they've been discounting about themselves.
Setting Healthy Boundaries
When you don't value yourself, you're more likely to let others mistreat you, overextend yourself, or stay in situations that diminish you. Therapy helps you recognize that you deserve respect and teaches you how to set boundaries that protect your wellbeing. Each time you honor a boundary, you reinforce your own worth.
Building Assertiveness
Learning to express your needs, opinions, and feelings without excessive fear or guilt is crucial for healthy self-esteem. Therapy provides a safe space to practice assertiveness and develop confidence in your right to take up space, have needs, and be heard.
Breaking People-Pleasing Patterns
If you've learned to derive worth from making others happy or avoiding conflict, therapy helps you examine this pattern and gradually shift toward living more authentically. You learn that disappointing someone occasionally doesn't make you a bad person, and that your needs matter just as much as anyone else's.
Celebrating Progress, Not Just Perfection
Therapy helps you recognize and celebrate small wins and efforts, not just major achievements. You learn to acknowledge growth, courage, and trying—even when things don't turn out perfectly. This builds a more sustainable, realistic foundation for self-esteem.
Experiencing Unconditional Acceptance
Perhaps one of the most healing aspects of therapy is experiencing genuine acceptance from your therapist. In person-centred therapy especially, you're met with unconditional positive regard—you're valued simply for being you, not for what you accomplish or how you perform. This experience can begin to rewire your belief about your own worthiness.
Types of Therapy That Help
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT): Directly targets negative thought patterns and helps you develop more balanced thinking about yourself.
Person-Centred Therapy: Offers unconditional acceptance that helps you internalize a more positive self-view.
EMDR: Processes traumatic experiences that damaged your self-esteem.
Compassion-Focused Therapy (CFT): Specifically designed to build self-compassion and counter self-criticism.
Psychodynamic Therapy: Explores how early relationships and experiences shaped your self-concept.
Group Therapy: Provides connection with others who struggle similarly and offers opportunities to receive positive feedback and support.
What Growth Looks Like
As therapy progresses and your self-esteem strengthens, you might notice:
Quieter, kinder internal dialogue
More willingness to try new things or take healthy risks
Ability to accept compliments and believe them
Setting and maintaining boundaries without excessive guilt
Making decisions with more confidence
Less comparison to others
Greater resilience when things go wrong
Choosing relationships and situations that honor your worth
Feeling more comfortable being yourself.
15 Years Experience
Online in Yeovil, ENG England
Julie Jenner
Counsellor/Therapist, BA(Hons), NCS Senior Accredited
Self-esteem, and confidence, can be so fragile and we can allow it to be taken from us without knowing we have a choice. If you hear a version of yourself often enough, eventually you believe it. Positive attention throughout our childhood can carry us a long way, just as unhealthy attention can be just as far reaching. We live in a society that thrusts expectation in front of us nearly constantly, and trying to live up to it can be painful and demoralising. How would you like to be able to know who you are and start living your life how you want it? Through questioning your self-beliefs, and where they come from, you can begin to feel better with who you are. By not trying to live up to standards and expectations set by others, you can find strength in doing it your way. Is low self-esteem about not being good enough, or about you trying to be somebody or something that you are not?
10 Years Experience
Online in Yeovil, ENG England (Online Only)
Georgina Lloyd
Counsellor/Therapist, MSW, LCSW
I support individuals struggling with low self-esteem, self-doubt, or negative self-beliefs. Through a collaborative, evidence-based approach, I help clients develop greater self-awareness, challenge unhelpful patterns, and build confidence, self-compassion, and a more positive sense of self.
6 Years Experience
Online in Yeovil, ENG England
John Castleford
Registered Psychotherapist, MA, MIAEB, FRAI
Self esteem is a measure of your relationship with yourself.
I can help you redefine that relationship by reviewing your core values, personal expectations and influences on you and your current state, and by providing guidance on how to be kinder to yourself. If confidence levels are low, I can help with very simple but effective ways to help you regain previous levels of self-belief, particularly if underpinned by excessive dependence on negative perceptions
18 Years Experience
Online in Yeovil, ENG England
Self Esteem therapists in Yeovil, England, United Kingdom Statistics
Self Esteem therapists in Yeovil, England, United Kingdom average 15 years of experience and charge around ¤120 per session. 100% offer online sessions. The top treatment approaches are Integrative Therapy (58%), Person-Centered Therapy (Rogerian) (50%), and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) (46%).
Average years in practice
15 Years Experience
Average cost per session
¤120
Accept insurance
36%
Offer sliding scale
51%
Gender ID
| 68% |
Female |
|
| 28% |
Male |
|
| 2% |
Non-Binary |
|
| 2% |
Gender Fluid |
|
Session Type
| 59% |
In Person and Online |
|
| 41% |
Online Only |
|
Top Treatment Approaches
| 58% | Integrative Therapy |
| 50% | Person-Centered Therapy (Rogerian) |
| 46% | Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) |
| 34% | Solution-Focused Brief Therapy (SFBT) |
| 32% | Psychodynamic Therapy |
| 32% | Behavioral Therapy |
| 29% | Existential / Humanistic Therapy |
Ages Served
| 96% | Adult |
| 52% | Senior |
| 52% | Young Adult |
| 42% | Teen |
| 18% | Children |
Client Focus
| 64% | Women |
| 48% | Men |
| 40% | LGBTQ+ |
| 35% | Christian |
| 32% | Persons with Disabilities |