
Connie Zmijewski
I am licensed in North Carolina with 40 years of professional work experience as a professional counselor and registered nurse....
20 years experience North Carolina

Self Esteem is at the heart of this directory, and you’ve taken an important step seeking support – you’re in the right place to connect with therapists ready to listen.
Online therapy offers flexibility, privacy, and convenience – you can meet from home or on the go. Browse the listings below to explore professionals and find someone who feels like a good fit for you.

I am licensed in North Carolina with 40 years of professional work experience as a professional counselor and registered nurse....
20 years experience North Carolina
I’m a licensed clinical social worker who enjoys helping people feel more grounded, understood, and in control of their lives....
22 years experience Florida

Welcome. My name is Connor, and I am a Licensed Independent Clinical Social Worker in Minnesota with 4 years of...
5 years experience Minnesota

I’m a qualified therapist (PGDip) based in the UK, I’ve worked with people facing: stress, anxiety, relationship problems, grief, depression,...
3 years experience United Kingdom

I am licensed in Kansas Colorado and Missouri with 5 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping...
5 years experience Kansas

Hello! I am licensed in California with 4 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with...
4 years experience California

A warm welcome to my profile. My work schedule is usually: Mondays 8am until 5pm Tuesdays 3pm until 5pm Fridays...
4 years experience United Kingdom

I am a licensed clinical social worker in the state of South Carolina (LISW-CP), Florida (LCSW), and Utah (LCSW). Also,...
12 years experience South Carolina

We are all on completely different walks of life. While we may be going in different directions, the one thing...
10 years experience United Kingdom

Greetings My name is Constance. I am a Licensed Professional Counselor who has been in the helping profession for 7...
7 years experience Oklahoma

Hello, my name is Connie. I am a licensed professional counselor in Pennsylvania with about 6 years of counseling experience....
8 years experience Pennsylvania

I am licensed in Pennsylvania with 3 years of professional work experience providing therapy and 15 years providing support to...
3 years experience Pennsylvania

I am credentialed in the United Kingdom with 4 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients...
4 years experience United Kingdom

I am an integrative therapist with over 10 years of experience. Throughout these years, I have worked with clients with...
11 years experience United Kingdom

Hi, I am a licensed professional counselor with approximately 20 years of experience. I enjoy working with many different populations...
20 years experience Pennsylvania

As a licensed therapist in North Carolina, I specialize in supporting individuals through complex emotional landscapes. My approach centers on...
5 years experience North Carolina

I am licensed in Georgia with over 10 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with...
5 years experience Georgia

Hello and Welcome! I’m Consuela I’m truly honored and excited that you’ve chosen to join me on this transformative journey....
9 years experience Georgia

I am licensed in Florida with 18 years of experience working with individuals, children and families. I have 5 years...
18 years experience Florida

Thank you for taking the time to read my profile. I am a Licensed Clinical Social Worker with years of...
5 years experience North Carolina

As a Licensed Clinical Social Worker in California, I specialize in supporting individuals navigating complex emotional landscapes. My practice centers...
7 years experience California

I am licensed in Texas with 7 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress,...
7 years experience Texas

I am licensed in Texas with 15 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress...
16 years experience Texas

I am licensed in Alaska with 14 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress...
15 years experience Alaska

As a licensed therapist in the District of Columbia, I bring over three decades of compassionate clinical experience to supporting...
33 years experience District of Columbia
Hi. My name is Cora Adams Strickland I’m a licensed clinical mental health counselor for the state of North Carolina....
20 years experience North Carolina

I am credentialed in the UK with 3 years of professional work experience as an Integrative Counsellor. I have experience...
3 years experience United Kingdom

I am Coral Haynes, a Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor, licensed in Kentucky, with 29 years of professional experience in the...
29 years experience Kentucky

I have immense passion for helping people navigate through life’s hardships. Everyone struggles in one way or another and sometimes...
6 years experience Texas

I am licensed in Illinois and Texas with 7 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients...
7 years experience Texas
I am a licensed therapist in Florida with 7 years of professional experience. Over the years, I’ve had the privilege...
7 years experience Florida

Hi! My name is Coretta Green and I am a Licensed Professional Counselor in the State of Georgia. I am...
3 years experience Georgia
Hello! I'm Corey (she/they), and I genuinely appreciate you taking the time to be here. I am AuDHD, queer-identifying, and...
5 years experience Illinois

Welcome! If you’re looking for support with difficult feelings or challenges in your life then you’re in the right place....
10 years experience North Carolina
Hi, I'm Corey. I'm a fully licensed clinical social worker and licensed professional counselor with a focus on addiction and...
4 years experience Michigan
Greetings! Allow me to introduce myself. My name is Corey McSweeney. I am from Brooklyn, New York, but I currently...
9 years experience New York

I am licensed in Mississippi with 9 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress...
10 years experience Mississippi
I am licensed in Georgia with 13 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress...
5 years experience Georgia
As a licensed therapist in North Carolina, I specialize in supporting individuals navigating complex emotional landscapes. My approach is deeply...
13 years experience North Carolina
As a licensed therapist in Virginia, I specialize in supporting individuals navigating complex emotional landscapes, with a deep commitment to...
4 years experience Virginia
Self-esteem refers to the way you value and view yourself – your sense of self-worth, confidence, and belief in your abilities. Healthy self-esteem allows you to accept strengths and weaknesses, set boundaries, pursue goals, and cope with setbacks. Low self-esteem often shows up as harsh self-criticism, feelings of inadequacy, avoidance of challenges, perfectionism, people-pleasing, or an ongoing fear of being exposed as a fraud.
Self-esteem is shaped by many factors over time: early relationships, cultural messages, life events, school or work experiences, and internalized beliefs. It is not a fixed trait. With the right support and practical strategies, most people can rebuild a more balanced and compassionate inner voice.
People seek help for self-esteem for many reasons. Some come because they struggle with persistent negative self-talk that affects mood and choices. Others are motivated by relationship difficulties, avoidance of new opportunities, or chronic comparison to others that drains confidence.
Low self-esteem can also be connected to specific life events like breakup, career transitions, bullying, childhood emotional neglect, or traumatic experiences. It often co-occurs with anxiety, depression, body image concerns, social anxiety, or impostor feelings at work. Even people who look outwardly successful can have fragile self-worth and seek therapy to make internal changes.
Therapy for self-esteem may address practical skills like assertiveness, coping with criticism, and restructuring self-critical thoughts. It also often explores deeper sources of shame, patterns learned in relationships, and ways to cultivate self-compassion and resilience.
Online therapy offers flexible, evidence-informed ways to address self-esteem. Many therapeutic approaches used to build self-worth translate well to telehealth, including cognitive-behavioral strategies that challenge unhelpful thoughts, acceptance and commitment methods that strengthen values-driven action, and compassion-focused techniques that reduce shame and self-criticism.
Working with a therapist online can help you notice negative self-beliefs, test them in real life, and practice new responses. Therapists can teach practical tools like cognitive restructuring, behavioral experiments, exposure to feared situations, assertiveness practice, and mindful self-compassion exercises. Homework and between-session messaging can reinforce progress and help skills generalize to daily life.
Because online therapy removes geographic limits, you can find therapists who specialize in self-esteem, body image, perfectionism, or related areas and who match your cultural background or life experience. That increased choice can be especially important when prior attempts at therapy didn’t feel like a good fit.
Online therapy offers several advantages that can make it easier to start and sustain work on self-esteem. Virtual sessions eliminate commute time and make it simpler to schedule brief, frequent sessions if that supports steady skill-building. Being in your own space can feel safer for practicing vulnerability and for immediately applying strategies between sessions.
Online care expands access to specialists beyond your local area, helping you find a therapist who understands specific concerns like cultural expectations, gender identity, or career-related pressure. Many people also appreciate the relative anonymity of teletherapy, which can reduce shame and make it easier to open up.
That said, in-person therapy remains a strong option for those who prefer face-to-face contact. Online therapy is not inherently superior—rather, it offers distinct conveniences and access that often lower barriers to getting consistent help for self-esteem work.
An initial online session typically includes a brief assessment of your concerns and history, discussion of what you hope to change, and collaborative goal-setting. Your therapist may ask about specific situations where self-esteem problems show up, and about patterns in relationships and self-talk.
Treatment often combines insight with skill-building. You can expect to practice strategies in session and receive exercises to try between meetings. Sessions may involve role-plays to rehearse assertive communication, cognitive exercises to challenge negative beliefs, guided self-compassion practices, and planning small experiments that test out new behaviors.
Progress is usually gradual. Some people notice relief after a few sessions when negative thoughts soften. For deeper-rooted issues, therapy might continue longer to explore origins of low self-esteem and strengthen lasting changes. Your therapist should review progress periodically and adjust the plan as needed.
When searching for a therapist, look for experience with self-esteem, confidence-building, or related concerns like body image, perfectionism, or social anxiety. Ask about the therapist’s approach and whether they use specific methods like cognitive-behavioral therapy, compassion-focused therapy, or narrative approaches.
Cultural competence and fit matter. Consider whether you want someone who shares or understands your cultural background, gender identity, sexual orientation, or life stage. Check practical considerations: availability, session formats (video, phone, messaging), fees, and confidentiality policies for online work.
It’s okay to ask screening questions during an initial consultation: How have you helped people with low self-esteem? What techniques do you use? What will a typical session look like? A good therapist will welcome questions and explain how they tailor work to your priorities.
Deciding to work on self-esteem is a courageous first step. You don’t need to have everything figured out before reaching out. Start by identifying one small goal—speaking up more in a meeting, setting a boundary with a friend, or practicing kinder self-talk—and mention it when you contact a therapist.
If reaching out feels daunting, consider scheduling a brief consultation or sending a message to ask about fit. Remember that therapy is a collaborative process: finding the right therapist may take a try or two, and that is normal. Each step toward support is progress.
Finding online therapy options can make starting easier and more private. If you’re ready, look for a therapist who specializes in self-esteem and who offers a format that fits your life. With consistent practice and a supportive therapist, many people build a steadier, kinder sense of self-worth that changes how they relate to themselves and others.