Building a Self-Worth That Isn't Conditional

Building a Self-Worth That Isn't Conditional

Welcome to the Healing Lab — the episode where we stop talking about the work and actually start doing it. This month’s theme is shame and self-worth, and these experiments are rooted in something deeply personal: the belief that you cannot think your way into self-worth. You have to practice it.

In this episode, Jessica shares two somatic and behavioral experiments designed to interrupt the pattern of conditional worth — and invites you into the lab alongside her.

What We Cover
  • The clinical framework behind conditional worth and why it shows up so often in high-achieving women
  • Why shame lives in the body — and why that’s where healing has to begin
  • Experiment #1: The Enough Body Scan — a daily somatic practice anchoring worthiness in physical sensation
  • Experiment #2: The Daily Commitment — two to three things each day that are purely for you
  • Jessica’s personal experience trying both experiments — what worked, what surprised her, what she’s keeping
  • How these two experiments work together — inside-out and outside-in — to meet in the middle

The Clinical Framework

When worth becomes conditional — when we believe we are only lovable while performing, producing, or caretaking — we stop giving ourselves permission to simply exist. The absence of self-directed care isn’t laziness. It’s the behavioral fingerprint of internalized shame.

These experiments work at the behavioral level because we can’t always change the belief directly — but we can change the behavior. And when we start treating ourselves as worthy of care, the belief begins slowly to shift.

Experiment #1: The Enough Body Scan

Once a day for two weeks, set aside five minutes for a slow, intentional body scan from head to toe. At each body part — your head, jaw, shoulders, chest, stomach, hands, and legs — offer a single phrase:

“This is enough. You are enough.”

This is not a relaxation exercise. It’s not about finding tension or tracking discomfort. It’s about anchoring the message “I am enough” in physical sensation — giving it somewhere to land for those who can’t yet access it cognitively.

What to track:

  • Does the phrase feel true, hollow, or somewhere in between?
  • Does it begin to shift over the two weeks?
  • Where in your body does it feel most resistant — and what do you make of that?

Jessica’s experience: She chose to do this experiment in the shower each morning. It was immediately impactful, helped set her intention for the day, and shifted the way she inhabits her body. She’s keeping it.

Experiment #2: The Daily Commitment

Every day for two weeks, do two to three things that are purely for you. Not for your kids, partner, clients, or boss. Just for you — without needing to earn them first.

You are someone you made a commitment to. Show up for yourself the way you show up for the people you love.

Ideas to spark your own list:

  • Making yourself something you actually want to eat
  • Moving your body in a way that feels genuinely good, not obligatory
  • Sitting outside for 10 minutes with no agenda
  • Reading something purely for pleasure, not for growth or information
  • Doing something creative just because it’s enjoyable — baking, painting, crafting, whatever is yours
  • Putting on music you love and actually sitting with it
  • A slow bath or long, unhurried shower
  • Watching something you enjoy without guilt or multitasking alongside it
  • A cup of something you love, made slowly, with nowhere to be

What to track:

  • Write down your two to three things each day
  • At the end of each week, ask: How hard was it to follow through? Did I negotiate with myself, minimize, or skip?
  • What did the inner voice say when I tried to give myself something?
  • Did that voice get any quieter by the end of the week?

How These Experiments Work Together

The body scan works quietly from the inside out — planting the message “I am enough” at the level of physical sensation, asking your body to practice receiving worth.

The daily commitment works from the outside in — asking your behavior to demonstrate worth through concrete daily action.

Together, they approach the same belief from two directions. The body scan softens the ground. The daily commitment builds the evidence. Over time, those two things meet in the middle — and that’s where the shift happens.

A Note on Resistance

For those who have run on conditional worth for a long time, these experiments may bring up guilt — the sense that you haven’t earned this yet, or that you’re being selfish. The voice that says: this is indulgent.

That voice is not the truth. It’s the wound. The most powerful thing you can do when it shows up is not to argue with it — but to do the thing anyway. That “even when” is where the healing lives.

Coming Up Next Week

The final episode of May looks at shame through a trauma-informed lens — how it shows up in the body, how it lives in our nervous system, and what it actually means to heal it at that level.

Connect & Stay in the Loop

If you tried these experiments, Jessica wants to hear about it. Share what you noticed, what came up, and what surprised you.

📰 Newsletter: healingismyhobby.com

📸 Instagram: @healingismyhobby

🎥 YouTube: @healingismyhobby

💼 Clinical Practice: jessicacolarcolcsw.com

self-worth, shame healing, conditional worth, somatic healing, body scan meditation, self-compassion practice, healing shame, worthiness, internalized shame, high-achieving women, therapy for anxiety, LCSW podcast, nervous system regulation, behavioral activation, self-care without guilt, healing is my hobby, Jessica Colarco, mental health podcast, trauma-informed therapy, inner critic, enough body scan, daily self-commitment, self-worth exercises, shame and the body, healing lab, self-worth practices, anxiety and perfectionism, people pleasing and worth, overcoming guilt, identity and self-worth

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