Whenever I ask people why they persist in seeking validation, whether it’s about who they are, their behaviour, or a situation, they tell me they don’t feel that they could be objective about things. The argument is that their own beliefs might prejudice them. Or they say they’re too ‘in’ something to see it clearly. In not valuing their own judgement or even themselves enough, it also means they don’t trust themselves.

In feeling that their personal feelings might influence them ‘too much’, which, of course, you’re going to be to a degree when you’re thinking about yourself, seeking validation from others seems like the answer. It then creates this blind and rather dangerous assumption that others are ‘correct’, ‘factual’ and are uninfluenced.

If you find it difficult to trust your opinion on yourself or a situation and seek ‘balance’ by gaining objectivity from external sources, you’re also assuming that these people are objective in the first place because they’re not you, as if we’re all objective just as long as it’s not ourselves.

You might assume others don’t have the same prejudices as you or the same things at ‘stake’.

On top of this, when you have a tendency to discount your own feelings, perception and opinion, you love making ‘experts’ out of those around you, even if they aren’t qualified or relevant.

You assign value to their so-called objectivity because you love them or because you want them to like/love you.

Maybe you think they’re very intelligent, beautiful, popular, respected by the community *or whatever ‘hooks’ you) and put them on a pedestal. If they have what you’d like, it can make sense to you that their opinion is valid. You figure if you listen, you could be just like them or at the very least find it easier to gain approval.

If you’re inclined to engage in a lot of self-blame and wonder what’s wrong with you when something goes wrong, you put too much of yourself into every situation.

Not only can you not be objective about yourself, but you can’t even be remotely objective about a situation or another person’s behaviour, or even their opinion.

You’ll receive ‘feedback’ and even if you know it’s not entirely true or that it’s very influenced by what that person gains by ‘positioning’ and portraying you in a certain light, that unwillingness to listen to yourself, to make judgements, to process feedback and to work out what you can keep and discard, means that you’ll go ahead and agree with them while privately grumbling or feeling aggrieved at the injustice of their assessment.

A very common example of this is when you already believe you have flaws that ‘scare’ people away and then you become interested in someone. Maybe they don’t reciprocate. Or maybe they do, but you go on a few dates and it doesn’t work out for whatever reason and you say, “It’s because there’s something wrong with me”.

When you believe you’re ‘not good enough’, you draw an incorrect conclusion that someone who doesn’t know you very well (or at all) agrees with your judgement of you, hence you are correct to feel how you do about yourself.

Is this true, though?

What if the person you dated was influenced by the fact that they weren’t as ready to date as they thought? Or maybe they just wanted a few dates. Or perhaps they recognised that they liked you but didn’t share the same values or whatever. How does this equate to you having flaws that scare people away?

Let’s just say that it’s a case of plain and simple not interested. The only way this equates to something being wrong with you is if you’ve already determined this meaning anyway. To think this way is to assume that your lack of interest in people is based on your recognising their worth, when really, you’re just not interested.

What you, of course, forget, is that the very nature of seeking validation, which is confirmation that something is true as opposed to feedback, which is generally two-way and information you can take on board but may not choose or want to, suggests to those whom you give license to, that you overvalue their opinion far too much. Which communicates the wrong things.

It’s one thing if you ask someone you trust (and they’ve earned it and it’s mutual) to give you their objective opinion on something and follow it up with your own internal compass. However, assuming that everyone else has more objectivity than you by default forgets that as humans we have a natural tendency to be influenced by our own experiences, perception, feelings, fears, beliefs, motivations, etc.

Persistently seeking validation also devalues you by default.

You live in your skin, think your own thoughts, move your own limbs, have your own values, and make your own choices. Not that you should ignore everyone and never listen to anything, but what it means is that your feelings, thoughts, and actions have validity and ultimately need to be directed by you.

Genuine feedback is two-way, whereas seeking validation is one-way, as you’ve already decided but are just seeking confirmation.

When someone appears to agree with a negative assessment and conclusion you’ve drawn about yourself, it becomes “Oh… so they agree with me. Woah! What? They agree with me! But I wanted them to disagree with me!”, even though you didn’t really because you wouldn’t have been satisfied that what they saw you as was correct because you believe it.

Therefore it becomes critical to address your unhealthy beliefs.

When you believe something, the only thing that will really change your believing that is you.

Until you’re willing to budge from that position, all you’ll do is bumble through life creating a self-fulfilling prophecy that confirms your beliefs, not because they’re ‘true true’, but because you’re in some sort of Groundhog Day gravitating to people and situations that help you believe.

You’ve also got to stop believing that everyone else is right as long as they agree with your unhealthy beliefs.

When you don’t know who you are or think you do, but it’s based on being your harshest critic, it can seem foreign to evaluate yourself, to judge a situation, or even judge another person’s actions.

Until you’re willing to listen with love to yourself, to not judge yourself so harshly, to trust you, to be compassionate, to give yourself a break, how can you really listen to ‘feedback’ from others? How can you listen and know who has your best interests at heart or at least isn’t influenced by their own shadiness or warped perspective? Yours will be a painful existence where everything looks and sounds like a reflection of you not being ‘good enough’.

It’s one thing to seek feedback, but feedback becomes seeking validation when you won’t listen to yourself and use your own eyes and ears.

Ultimately, seeking validation is like saying, “Tell me who I am! Tell me what I’m worth!” You tell yourself who you are, and you tell you what you’re worth.

Your thoughts?

My books, The Dreamer and the Fantasy Relationship and Mr Unavailable and the Fallback Girl, are available from my bookshop.

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