From the New York Times bestselling author of Platonic, a groundbreaking guide exploring the promise (and limits) of secure attachment to help us feel better and boost our self-esteem.What if what you thought you knew about secure attachment was wrong? Or worse, making you
more insecure?
Dr. Marisa G. Franco is the
New York Times bestselling friendship expert whose advice Glennon Doyle calls “wise, concrete, and effective”—Dr. Franco literally wrote the book
on how to become a securely attached friend. But since then, she’s realized that when we feel unworthy, the things we
think should make us feel secure and raise our self-esteem backfire:
- Optimistic self-talk makes us feel worse, not better.
- Positive feedback raises our blood pressure.
- Compliments make us uncomfortable.
- Positive events make us sicker.
The good news: Self-esteem is a skill that can be learned—and you can get better at it, which in turn strengthens all your other relationships. In
Worth, Dr. Franco mines promising new research at the intersection of psychology and neuroscience to show us
why so many of us still struggle with self-esteem (even in this self-obsessed age), and
how we can build a foundation of lasting self-worth that doesn’t rely on likes or followers. Through exercises, stories, and the cutting-edge science of memory reconsolidation, updating damaging memories to change the stories we tell ourselves, Dr. Franco shows how we can bring meaning, self-worth, and secure attachment back into our lives, from the inside out. If you feel like you’ve read every book on healing, but you are still struggling,
Worth will help you finally find the transformation you’ve been looking for.