Rate Me Rate me?

If you’re posting just to get a rating from strangers, you’re handing your self-worth over to people who don’t know you, don’t live your life, and won’t be there when it actually matters.

Ratings are shallow by design. They reduce a whole, complex human being into a number based on a split-second impression. That number says more about the rater’s preferences, mood, and biases than it does about your value as a person.

If you’re looking for validation, that’s human we all want to feel seen. But chasing scores is a losing game because there will *always* be someone who rates you lower than you hoped. And if you tie your confidence to that, you’re building it on sand.

Real self-worth comes from things you control: how you treat people, how you handle challenges, how you grow, what you stand for. It comes from keeping promises to yourself. From improving because *you* want to, not because strangers approve.

Instead of asking, “What do you rate me?” maybe ask, “Am I becoming someone I respect?”

That answer will matter a lot longer than any number ever could.
 
If you’re posting just to get a rating from strangers, you’re handing your self-worth over to people who don’t know you, don’t live your life, and won’t be there when it actually matters.

Ratings are shallow by design. They reduce a whole, complex human being into a number based on a split-second impression. That number says more about the rater’s preferences, mood, and biases than it does about your value as a person.

If you’re looking for validation, that’s human we all want to feel seen. But chasing scores is a losing game because there will *always* be someone who rates you lower than you hoped. And if you tie your confidence to that, you’re building it on sand.

Real self-worth comes from things you control: how you treat people, how you handle challenges, how you grow, what you stand for. It comes from keeping promises to yourself. From improving because *you* want to, not because strangers approve.

Instead of asking, “What do you rate me?” maybe ask, “Am I becoming someone I respect?”

That answer will matter a lot longer than any number ever could.
While I do understand where you’re coming from who is to say I don’t already have self worth? That I just like showing my body? Because that is simply the way it is for me. Your words are power and will help someone, but they are also words that do not apply to me personally
 
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