Effective Communication Skills for Good Relationships

Inferiority Complex and the Self-Image

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Inferiority Complex and the Self-Image

Sally walks into a room full of high-flying executives. She scans the room with her eyes to see the executives dressed in expensive suits, sipping champagne, and mingling amongst each other. She feels “different” to the executives.

She senses the executives are better than her. She feels below standard because the executives are dressed in suits while she wears a basic top and skirt. She does not know the executives very well and finds it hard to socialize with them, which makes her feel less as a person. Regardless of the superficial reason for her difference that makes her feel less than the executives, the real problem is her inferiority complex.

In 1912, a psychologist by the name of Alfred Alder wrote a book titled The Neurotic Character. His research in the book founded a popular area of psychology known as the inferiority complex, a term that describes a sense of inferiority an individual feels about oneself towards other people. It revolves around social status, power, ego, and dominance. You will have an inferiority complex when you feel less than people. You think other people are better than you.

Sally in our example feels inferior because she thinks the executives are better than her. Her inferiority has nothing to do with not knowing the executives, being dressed differently, or having a less prestigious job. Her interpretation of this situation that makes her feel below standard creates her inferiority.

An inferiority complex can arise when you experience an imagined or conditioned feeling of inferiority. As is the case for most people, it is a combination of imagination and subtle conditioning. You feel inferior when an event takes place, which makes you feel less than others (conditioning aspect), and your creative imagination (imagination aspect) would “blow out” your understanding of the event beyond what seems reasonable to another person.

The conditioning aspect in Sally’s example is her actual differences to the executives. She is wearing different clothes to the executives and she is not “a part of the group” based on her employment status. The imagination aspect for Sally is her clothes fall below standards, the executives are better than her, the executives want nothing to do with her because of her difference, plus many other irrationalities she thinks that makes her feel like a lesser human. The big difference between conditioning and imagination hold the answer to cure your inferiority complex.

The First Main Factor of Inferiority: Conditioning

I would be completely lying and doing everyone a disfavor if I said, “The inferiority complex is all in the mind. Just stop thinking you’re inferior because you’re not.” If it were so simple, billions of people would not experience feelings of inferiority sometime in their life. The inferiority complex is society’s psychological black plague that devours too many lives.

My main motivation in writing this article was to provide an accurate source of information to overcome the problem based on what works. The information in this article is a collection of the most useful advice on the inferiority complex I have synthesized over the years, along with specific lessons I have developed to overcome my own inferiority complex; unlike personal development teachers I know of who solely emphasize positiveness to overcome feelings of inferiority.

I did some brief browsing on the web to see what information was available on the inferiority complex, and most of the advice offered is harmful. “Experts” were telling people “things will get better”, “be more positive”, or “it’s not so bad”. If you have the inferiority complex and someone says similar things to you, you will understand the massive frustration caused from the misunderstanding when someone gives you such poor advice.

Positive thinking can be nicely understood through an analogy in a Bible verse. In Luke chapter five (NKJV), Jesus was talking to complaining Pharisees. Jesus replied to them in a parable so they would be more likely to understand:

“No one puts a piece from a new garment on an old one otherwise the new makes a tear, and also the piece that was taken out of the new does not match the old. And no one puts new wine into old wineskins; or else the new wine will burst the wineskins and be spilled, and the wineskins will be ruined.”

The garment and the wineskins examples are what positive thinking does to our self-image. A new patch over the bad garment improves the garment a little bit, yet it is still its same old self. If new wine (positive thinking) is poured into old wineskins (your poor self-image of feeling inferior), then nothing good will result. It is a battle of willpower and what is known as creative imagination.

Positive thinking can slightly improve the situation, but in the end it usually results in frustration as your willpower becomes exhausted. Willpower results in an oscillation between the problem and an absence of the problem – failing to create a permanent solution. You cannot use self-determination to cure feelings of inferiority. Whenever willpower fights creative imagination, creative imagination is the victor. I repeat for emphasis: Your creative imagination, which consists of images and feelings, will always conquer your willpower.

From personal experience and coaching others, I know first hand that a better self-image where you do not feel inferior cannot be achieved through positive self-talk, affirmations, and the like. Unfortunately, thousands of people have taught, and continue to teach, that using positive self-talk will overcome your problems. Positive self-talk is often nothing more than an attempt to live deliriously from reality, ignoring what really takes place.

When Doing Becomes Being – Why Failure and Criticism Fuel Inferiority

The primary factors of conditioning that determine whether you become inferior or rise above the circumstance is your attitude towards criticism and failure. Do not forget about the creative imagination component – the stronger influence of feeling inferior – yet criticism and failure most powerfully influence the conditioning component.

Criticism and failure will always bang at your door to success – more so as you achieve your goals. I have noticed that as readers of my newsletter (ToP Tips) and articles increase, so does the criticism. I get excited with this because I know the criticism signals achievement. Any criticism and failure has nothing to do with me – in fact, it usually has more to do with the other person.

Inferiority arises when doing becomes being.

You and I will always have our critics if we avoid mediocrity. Anyone that has achieved anything notable, sooner or later receives harsh criticism. Find a dark corner where you can hide from the world if you want to avoid criticism (but then again, you will be criticized for hiding). The Greek philosopher Aristotle said, “Criticism is something we can avoid easily by saying nothing, doing nothing, and being nothing.”

People criticize you because they either want to improve your life, desire to release their frustration, or have their own problems. Failure and criticism say nothing about you; rather, let them signal personal growth. You can take criticism as a sign of progressing in life. If I had not experienced feelings of inferiority, I would not have worked on myself and personally grown. No way would I be writing this article today. I am certain I would not teach any communication skills.

You will never eliminate criticism or failure. The conditioning aspect of inferiority will never vanish. Therefore, to overcome the inferiority complex you cannot expect to avoid failure, dodge criticism, and achieve perfection. You must learn, move on, and maintain a goal-focused attitude to overcome an inferiority complex.

Criticism and failure will never stop as long as you pursue goals. Problems arise when you let the two burglars get a foot hold within your life. You come to feel inferior by associating criticism and failure with how you see yourself. The thieves steal valuable mental goods important to your success.

You will always do things in an inferior way to what other people can do – there is no ignoring that – but a secret to overcome your inferiority complex is to stop associating yourself with your actions. Stop letting failure and criticism form your identity. Inferiority arises when doing becomes being. When you associate what you do with yourself, actions of doing become actions of being.

A young guy gets poor results at school. He associates his grades with his intelligence – leading him to believe he is dumb. Is he really dumb because he was too lazy to study? No. A guy that gets poor results at school and does not feel inferior, dissociates himself with the result. He does not let his lack of study and effort over the school year make him feel that he is his outcome.

When you feel criticism is a signal of your unworthiness, only then does it stimulate inferiority, shame, and failure. Do not take criticism personally and think of yourself as a failure. Justly deserved criticism needs to be used as feedback to adjust your course of action back on the path of success.

The Three Factors of Criticism – Don’t Let These Get You Down

We all have been criticized. Some people suffer while others flourish and experience great levels of confidence, success, happiness, and intimate relationships. Why is this? What can you learn from this to overcome your inferiority complex?

The underlying reason some people feel inferior from criticism and failure, while other people flourish under such feedback, is how they react to the three components of criticism: the power of the sender, intensity, and frequency. You cannot control the three components of criticism – as is true for any conditioning aspect of inferiority – but you can control your reaction to them (the imagination component).

If you are passionate about boxing and Muhammad Ali said you are a hopeless boxer, his power and status intensifies the criticism. In addition, if his criticism was delivered in an intense outburst, the criticism would have a bigger impact on you feeling inferior as a boxer. If Ali also constantly reminded you how hopeless you are at boxing, this would stimulate further inferiority. The sender, intensity, and frequency of positive and negative messages impact how we feel about ourselves.

What matters, however, is your reaction. Think of a time when the power of the sender, intensity of the criticism, and the frequency of criticism made you feel inferior. If you can – and I suggest you do – make your selected memory one related to your current feelings of inferiority. If you are a shy person, perhaps think of a time when someone told you to stop talking because you have nothing good to say.

Once you have come up with one or several memories, ask yourself these questions:

  • What were you thinking when the person made you feel inferior?
  • What emotions did you experience?
  • What self-talk followed the person’s negative feedback?
  • How long did these feelings and thoughts last?
  • How intense were these feelings and thoughts?
It is the thoughts and feelings you experience after the event that determine whether your inferiority grows or dies.

After answering these questions, if you reacted poorly to the negative feedback given to you in these situations, you should now be aware of how your feelings of inferiority develop. This is big. If you have the inferiority complex or know someone with it, I hope you’re getting excited about this insight.

The powerful lesson we can learn from this is that people’s criticism and other types of negative feedback has no power over you. It is not the events that make you inferior; it is your reaction to the events. It is the thoughts and feelings you experience after the event that determine whether your inferiority grows or dies. The conditioning aspect of inferiority partly manifests through the criticism of others – if you let it – yet your reaction to the event determines how you feel about yourself.

You condition yourself to feel inferior through self-criticism. You become your own worst enemy. The failed events and experiences shape your identity, making you appear a failure.

Harmful feelings trail behind harmful thoughts. You start to feel inferior. You use your creative imagination poorly and begin to evoke images of failure, misery, shame, unworthiness, and low self-esteem. All the negative messages you’ve accepted over time mold your self-image to make you feel inferior. You eventually believe you are inferior. That is essentially how an inferiority complex develops – through your creative imagination.

About the Author

Joshua Uebergang, aka "Tower of Power", teaches social skills to help shy persons build friends and influence people. Visit his blog and sign-up free to get communication techniques, relationship-boosting strategies, and life-building tips by email, along with blog updates, and more! Go now to http://www.towerofpower.com.au/free/

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33 Responses to “Inferiority Complex and the Self-Image”

  1. Aditya on 15th Dec, 2008 at 10:25 pm • (#11)

    Dude…Your article rocks! I like your writing from the point when you said that “positive thinking” is not the way out (but I don’t know why u suggesting “positive image” in Superiority Complex part) because I tried that so MANY times before but in the end it is just like what you said, exhausted willpower.

    I feel like pumped up as I scrolling down through your article. It tells about reality and real-life-effective advice rather than the ideal advice than people usually suggesting. I hope I can work my way out to lessen my inferiority complex.

    Once again, Thanks a bunch :)

  2. Fola on 15th Dec, 2008 at 10:27 pm • (#12)

    I noticed that i always dread my boyfriend visiting me at my place of work.There was always increased secretion of adrenaline e.t.c. This is because,i felt he would be attracted to a colleague of mine,whom i felt was more beautiful than i.She gets on well with him whenever he comes visiting. My boyfriend pointed it out that i’m not always myself whenever he’s @ my place of work. I have read a lot of self esteem,self-image articles on the internet, but none had really helped.I pray this will work for me,cos it really pointed out real cases,like that of Sally,which actually depicts what i would have felt if i were in her shoes.

    Thank you so much Joshua,cos i’m already combining a good creative imagination and positive thinking.Hmmm ,it feels good not to have inferiority complex :smile: .I’m glad that i am ME.Thanks to you Joshua,for helping me discover the real me. :wink:

  3. Eem on 15th Dec, 2008 at 10:28 pm • (#13)

    I was filling in a form which required my language skills. I can comfortably speak and write 5 languages:neutral:. I have acquired this skill on a needs basis and never used to think much about, except if I have to use the language. An acquaintance jokingly said in the large scheme of things these were not very important languages :evil: . I need (for official purposes necessary) to learn the language of this acquaintance. I am having difficulties with it :sad: .At the time i took it in my stride and mentioned how these languages were important to me. When I think of his comment I break into a sweat and my heart pounds. My acquaintance is quite a successful individual and am pretty sure he’s forgotten that he made the comment. I live in another country with a similar language “my unimportant” languages and I would like to learn it as well. I hope with the help of this article I’ll be able to appreciate my progress.

  4. Katie on 15th Dec, 2008 at 10:30 pm • (#14)

    This article really resonated with me. Thanks so much for posting it. I think it’ll help a lot of people. Although I’ve heard about them, I’ve never tried visualization techniques before and this article may be enough to make me try them out.

    Small thing that I’ve noticed although I don’t know if this will work for everyone – people with inferiority complexes often write “i” instead of “I” in emails, posts etc – by consciously writing “I” I find it gives you a little boost. It’s as if you’re recognizing that you deserve to be capitalized – like you respect yourself more. :lol: Just a thought :)

  5. mx on 15th Dec, 2008 at 10:30 pm • (#15)

    I have been feeling inferior since i started high school. Each time when my friends or relative (same age) scores higher marks than me in studies, i would feel very very frustrated. I’m currently having trouble coping with studies but hope to be able to follow your guidelines and overcome my inferiority complex. Your info has been a great help to me. Thank you.

  6. hikikomori-san on 15th Dec, 2008 at 10:32 pm • (#16)

    If it were only that simple! The approach outlined in this article and other approaches (like brute will power) MIGHT help in SOME cases of minor or temporary feelings of inferiority. Why? Because fake, synthesized, and unreal feelings, emotions, and thoughts always lose to real ones. The mind is not so easy to trick, and the fact that your current state (reality) is different from your desired state (unachieved goal) is not something your mind can just ignore. Maybe I have poor imagination skills, but I have tried many times to imagine myself in a fight, but I never could trick myself into actually believing that I was, and so my heart rate didn’t increase, no adrenaline was released or anything. If you could then maybe this approach will work for you.

    The feeling of inferiority can manifest itself in one or more forms: shyness, reclusiveness, exhibited superiority feelings, lack of motivation to compete, or just feeling uneasy around “superior” individuals, among others. In most cases, this becomes a defining character trait. Get a shy person, knock him on the head with a blackjack until all his memories are wiped out – he will still be shy.

    Also, I’d say in most cases, the feeling of inferiority is due to an undeniable and clear actual inferiority. It is important to distinguish between real inferiority and perceived inferiority. So the feeling is not always evil – it’s your brain telling you you’re not good enough at something.

    The article does say a lot of interesting things though, and it’s still quite a good read nevertheless. Good luck everyone.

  7. @hikikomori-san – that’s what I emphasized in the article. Positive thinking and the like don’t work because they are fake. However, “fake it till you make it” approach has been effective for many people.

    Real emotions come about through your experience and interpretation of the world. You have enormous control over how you choose to feel and think. Visualizing is a way of creating real emotions. Some people do have problems visualizing. It’s okay. After some practice it comes.

    Several studies on the neurology of the human brain, following surgery where the Amygdala was removed, has revealed drastic personality changes. Moreover, feelings of inferiority and other emotions are conditioned into us. Any human characteristic can be changed because it all is just physiology.

    There is nothing wrong in being inferior in things. The “undeniable” aspect of inferiority, which I also mentioned, is okay. This is the conditioning aspect. The problem arises when our creative imaginations lead us to believe WE are inferior; not what we do is inferior.

  8. Leigh on 15th Dec, 2008 at 10:34 pm • (#18)

    hi, although it is a good sentiment, it’s one i struggle to believe. I find it hard to see how everyone can equate themselves to everyone else when in reality some people will always be “more overall” than other people. It was the philosopher Nietzsche who said that “not all men are born equal” and he was correct. It seems pretty pointless to me for say, professional tennis players to want to win Wimbledon so much if our nature is that achieving something like that doesn’t make us more of a person.

    I know that articles such as this mean well, and for that i appreciate them. But i also believe in life there is such a thing as a hierarchy. The majority of people can equate themselves to most other people, but not to absolutely everyone

  9. As I’ve said before, again, there’s nothing wrong with that. It’s inevitable. What you say about hierarchy has very little to do with inferiority, again, because it’s the conditioning aspect. Please re-read the article and previous comments because this is the primary message I repeat over and over in the article.

  10. Varish on 15th Dec, 2008 at 10:36 pm • (#20)

    As a Sri Lankan, I have “cultural cringe”. I sometimes feel inferior because of my mediocre culture and mediocre people in it. My mind clearly differentiates between “superior race” and “inferior race”. It hurts me when I try to raise my voice and meet new people. They ask me my identity, my origin, my country and I just try to avoid the question. You’re correct -positive affirmations like “be proud of who you are” only helps in reinforcing the negativity.

    The other side of the story, I’m a talented person -I play guitar, write novels and generally an enjoyable person to hang out with. Many a times, I’ve had people willing to accept me for who I am because they really needed my company. I mistook that for charity. I hate to be pitied.

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