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  2. Illusory superiority - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illusory_superiority

    Personality characteristics vary widely between people and have been found to moderate the effects of illusory superiority, one of the main examples of this is self-esteem. Brown (1986) found that in self-evaluations of positive characteristics participants with higher self-esteem showed greater illusory superiority bias than participants with ...

  3. Self-esteem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-esteem

    Research has found a strong correlation between high self-esteem and self-reported happiness, but it is not yet known whether this relationship is causal. This means that although people with high self-esteem tend to report greater happiness, it is not certain whether having high self-esteem directly causes increased happiness. [6]

  4. Self-serving bias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-serving_bias

    Individuals with higher self-esteem are thought to have more to protect in their self-image, and therefore exhibit the self-serving bias more often than those individuals with lower self-esteem. [2] In a study, participants who were induced to feel the emotions of guilt or revulsion were less likely to make self-serving attributions for success ...

  5. Self-handicapping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-handicapping

    Individuals that showed signs of unstable self-esteem were more likely to exhibit self-handicapping behaviors in an attempt to externalize failure and internalize success by action or performance setting choice. An example of self-handicapping is the student who spends the night before an important exam partying rather than studying.

  6. Hildebrandt fears that, even for people with no history of disorder, the high chance of failure built into 75 Hard may cause people to lose motivation. Similarly, 75 Hard requires an all-or ...

  7. Contingent self-esteem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contingent_self-esteem

    An individual's self-esteem fluctuates in response to different events. [2] Men and women alike are also selective about which events affect their self-esteem. [2] This instability of self-esteem is the result of having contingent self-worth. [2] Good and bad events can momentarily raise or lower feelings of self-esteem. [2]

  8. People Look Back On Their 45 Biggest Regrets From Their 20s - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/low-self-esteem-confidence...

    I was pretty risk averse in my 20s but looking back, even if I did 2 years failing and learning and 2 years at my 20s job (vs 4 years at my 20s job), I likely would have wound up in around the ...

  9. How to Support a Partner Who Can't Get Aroused - AOL

    www.aol.com/support-partner-cant-aroused...

    Many men are likely to experience arousal issues at some time in their life, and those who repeatedly find themselves flaccid can end up with self-esteem issues, performance anxiety and other long ...