Short read: A reminder for the part of you that feels “unworthy”

Lucy Newport • June 15, 2025

Reading time: 2.5 mins

Originally shared as part of Inbox Reflections - my honest, heartfelt emails to support your binge eating recovery as a highly sensitive woman. 



This is how I’ve come to understand what it means to feel “worthy” as a Highly Sensitive Person and the roles of innate worth and self-worth within this… 

Innate worth
refers to the intrinsic value and deservingness that you have simply because you exist.

It is universal, unconditional and constant 💖And nothing you could ever do could impact it.

And yes - this includes your weight. No amount of weight loss or weight gain could change your innate worthiness. 


Self-worth
, on the other hand, is subjective.

It refers to how you
perceive value in yourself. It’s shaped by your beliefs, experiences, achievements and relationships - and it can fluctuate throughout your life.

As a HSP who absorbs a lot and processes it deeply, you likely take the messages about “worth” to heart - feeling like you have to perform or be a certain way to feel good enough.

(This is only amplified by feeling different as a HSP and wanting so badly to be accepted and to fit in.)


And because you’re here, I’m guessing your self-worth feels closely tied to your weight.


When you lose weight and move toward your “ideal body,” your self-worth rises. When you gain weight, it drops.

But here’s the thing…

A strong sense of
self-worth is important - but it becomes more resilient and less tied to your body, productivity or other people’s opinions when it’s rooted in the unshakeable truth of your innate worth.

Without that foundation, you may find yourself trying to
earn your worth - by shrinking yourself, saying yes when you mean no, or pushing through when you really need rest.

However, when you know deep down that you are innately worthy, it’s easier to untether yourself from doing the things that ultimately aren’t you or don’t serve you. This knowing becomes an internal anchor that helps you withstand external pressures. 


If this idea of innate worth feels distant right now, you’re not alone. For many of us, it’s something we gradually remember over time - not something we suddenly
feel one day.

(For me it’s been a journey of many years, one that I’m still walking in lots of ways.)

But the more you reconnect with it, the less your self-worth depends on your weight, your output, or your performance. It begins to root itself in something far deeper and truer.

And this is where being a Highly Sensitive Person is such a gift.

Because you feel deeply, you can sense the truth of this - you
know what I’m talking about.

You can build a relationship with yourself that honours your softness, your values, and your way of being in the world.

Not by earning your worth.


But by remembering it is always here. 





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Reading / watching time: 19 mins This is a question that Ester emailed me directly and because it’s something that often comes up further along in binge eating recovery journeys, I asked if she’d mind me sharing it and my answer with you all. Thanks for agreeing Ester! She asked: “I strongly feel the wish to lose weight now that I’ve gained food freedom and I would really love to hear your experience about this. Do you still face the desire of being thinner, do you have any tips to handle it or do you suggest to just let it go and provide the unconditional love and appreciation that is needed underneath?” So in this video I share with you my most recent experience of wanting to lose weight, a couple of things for you to work with in your own journey and some words of wisdom from Ester…
By Lucy Newport September 27, 2024
Reading time: 1.5 mins Originally shared as part of Inbox Reflections - my honest, heartfelt emails to support your binge eating recovery as a highly sensitive woman. There’s a game called “enough” that many of us are unknowingly playing but know the rules of all too well. The game where we believe that our bodies aren’t; Slim enough Toned enough Curvy enough Smooth enough Beautiful enough Anything else enough And so we do the aaaaall the things to reach that winning destination (the diets, workouts, fasts etc). But when we reach our goals, that sense of “enoughness” almost immediately disappears… We worry about losing what we’ve worked so hard to achieve, the body shape “trends” shift or we fixate on another part of our appearance. This reality hit me (again!) on the weekend when I was having breakfast in a London cafe and got talking to a couple of women at the table next to me. One of them told me that she’d never wear a sleeveless top, no matter how hot it was because she thought her arms were “too skinny”. This particular insecurity struck me because: She had the kind of body I would have once done anything for. So many women don’t like their arms for the opposite reasons - they think they’re too big or soft. And I felt so much compassion for all women in that moment because there is no winning. No matter how your body looks, if you’re participating in this game, you will feel insecure about something. I’m not saying that it’s bad or wrong for having moments of insecurity, we all will at times and that’s okay. What I am asking you is whether you’re willing to spend your life trying to get your body to look “enough”, when “enough” defined by this game doesn’t really exist? Are you willing to continue playing?




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