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Why boundaries aren’t enough

Embodied self-worth is a better goal

The RHR Digest | Publication Date: November 21st, 2025

Key Points:

  • Embodied self-worth goes beyond mindset to a felt sense in your body that you are worthy of care, protection, and dignity.
  • High-control religions often condition you to locate your worth in obedience, niceness, or sacrifice, which can make embodied self-worth feel unsafe or out of reach.
  • Moving from subservience to embodied self-worth usually requires going beyond setting boundaries to letting your body register “I matter” in real-time interactions.
  • Practicing embodied self-worth is a slow, iterative process of noticing your internal cues, honoring your limits, and allowing yourself to take up space even when guilt or fear surface.

If you read Monday’s A Note From Megan about being groomed for submission, you may remember that I ended that newsletter by naming the goal many of us are moving toward—getting to a place of embodied self-worth.

Embodied self-worth is not just an intellectual belief that “I have value” or “I deserve better,” but a lived reality where your body knows you are worthy of care, respect, and protection.

For those of us raised in high-control religion, this can feel like a significant shift.

We were trained to locate our worth outside of ourselves—in our submission, our niceness, our service, our willingness to “turn the other cheek” and absorb harm without complaint.

So in today’s RHR Digest, I’m taking a deeper dive into embodied self-worth:

  • What it looks like, practically, to move toward embodied self-worth in your day-to-day life
  • What it actually is (beyond self-esteem platitudes)
  • How religious conditioning trains you away from it

What Is Embodied Self-Worth?

When I talk about embodied self-worth, I’m describing a nervous-system-level knowing that:

  • Your needs matter
  • Your limits are legitimate
  • Your body is not a liability to manage, but a home to protect
  • You are allowed to take up space, even when someone else doesn’t like it

This is different from simply having positive self-talk.

You can affirm “I’m worthy” all day long, but if your body still freezes when someone crosses a boundary, or you still default to smoothing things over to keep the peace, your nervous system hasn’t caught up.

Embodied self-worth shows up in moments like:

  • Feeling the surge of “this is not okay” in your chest when someone disrespects you, and letting that be information you act on
  • Saying “no” or “that doesn’t work for me” even when your heart is pounding and your hands are shaking
  • Choosing to rest, eat, or log off before you hit the wall because there’s an awareness that you’re worth caring for

It’s important to understand that you don’t have to feel calm or confident to be in a space of embodied self-worth.

Often, embodied self-worth looks like taking self-honoring action even while your body is fearful or resistant.


How High-Control Religions Disconnect Us

Embodied self-worth is often a liability in high-control religious systems that glorified self-denial, submission, and “joyful suffering.”

Often, those of us indoctrinated into these systems learn that:

  • Obedience matters more than your internal signals.
  • “Dying to self” is holy, especially if you were assigned female at birth.
  • Questioning authority is rebellion, not discernment.
  • Anger is not acceptable, especially if it’s directed at people in power.
  • Enduring mistreatment meekly is proof of spiritual maturity.

Over time, your body begins to internalize messages such as:

  • When I speak up, bad things happen.
  • When I feel hurt, I’m the problem.
  • When I say “no,” I risk losing love, community, or safety.

From a nervous system perspective, this conditioning can have a profound impact that most often shows up in the form of trauma responses.

Experiencing one of the 4F trauma responses (fight, flight, freeze, fawn) makes sense given the high-pressure and manipulative contexts you were forced to chronically endure.

And it’s important to understand that these responses were simply adaptations designed to keep you psychologically and/or physically safe in a threatening environment.

If fawning (appeasing, people-pleasing, over-explaining) or freezing (going numb, going quiet, dissociating) helped you survive, it makes sense that your body still defaults there—even now, in adulthood, even outside the church.

Embodied self-worth is asking your body to do something it may have never been allowed to do → treating your needs, limits, and safety as non-negotiable.

Essentially, stepping into a space of embodied self-worth goes beyond a mindset shift to a full-body retraining process.


From Understanding Limits to Fully Experiencing Them

In Monday’s email, I named the gap between having boundaries in theory and actually confronting harmful behavior in real time.

That gap is often where embodied self-worth is still under construction.

You might:

  • Know what your boundaries are but freeze when it’s time to express them
  • Rerun a conversation in your head and think of ten things you wish you’d said
  • Tell yourself “it wasn’t that bad” to minimize your own hurt and avoid conflict

Having these types of automatic responses usually means your nervous system is still wired to view confrontation as a threat.

Embodied self-worth grows in the tiny, awkward, often shaky moments when you:

  • Notice that familiar pull to smooth things over, and pause instead of immediately appeasing
  • Let yourself name what happened: “That comment crossed a line for me” or “I didn’t feel respected in that interaction”
  • Take one small step toward alignment—sending a follow-up text, voicing your discomfort, or choosing not to re-enter a dynamic that feels degrading

Each time you do this, you’re allowing your nervous system to develop new neural pathways that support embodied self-worth over automatic capitulation: “I can honor myself and survive the discomfort that follows.

Over time, the neural pathways that help you fully experience embodied self-worth will become stronger and stronger.


What Embodied Self-Worth Can Feel Like

When people begin rooting into embodied self-worth from a Self-led place, it often feels less like a lightning-bolt moment and more like settling into themselves.

And depending on your history and identity, embodied self-worth might feel very different in your body than it does in mine.

In general, there’s often a quiet, steady sense of “I’m here, I matter, and I don’t have to disappear to keep the peace.”

Your body may feel a bit heavier in a good way—feet more planted, breath dropping lower, shoulders softening as you stop bracing for impact.

Your attention begins to shift from “What will they think?” toward “What would feel caring and protective for me?”

This doesn’t mean everything feels calm.

Self-energy can show up as a clean, grounded anger that simply says, “That crossed a line,” even if your heart is racing.

Old guilt or shame may still flare after you set a boundary, but a wiser, compassionate part of you stays present instead of abandoning yourself.

From this place, even nausea, shaking, or a vulnerability hangover become signs that your nervous system is trying something new.

All this simply means that your body is learning that it can name harm, honor its limits, and still be worthy of care and belonging.


Practicing Embodied Self-Worth in Daily Life

You do not have to overhaul your entire life to begin embodying self-worth.

In fact, it’s often more effective to start with very small, specific experiments.

Here are a few places you might practice:

1. In your relationship with rest

Given everything we explored in last week’s Digest about rest, notice what happens when you:

  • Give yourself 10–15 minutes of intentional rest (eyes closed, phone down, nothing to “earn”)
  • Track what your body does: Do you tense up? Do you feel guilty? Does your mind race?
  • Gently remind yourself: “Nothing bad is happening. I am allowed to rest.”

The goal is not to feel blissed out.

The goal is to build tolerance for being a human who is worthy of care, even when you’re not producing anything.

2. In low-stakes interactions

You don’t have to start with the narcissistic family member or the entitled boss.

Practice embodied self-worth first in smaller, safer places:

  • Let the barista remake your drink if it’s wrong instead of saying “it’s fine”.
  • Tell a friend, “I’m actually too tired tonight—can we reschedule?”
  • Correct someone gently when they mispronounce your name or make an assumption about you.

Each of these moments is a rep.

You’re teaching your body, “When I honor myself, the world doesn’t end.”

3. In how you talk to yourself afterward

Sometimes the hardest part isn’t speaking up.

It’s dealing with the internal backlash that comes next.

When you do something self-honoring and then feel guilt, shame, or panic, try:

  • Naming it: “Oh, this is old conditioning. My body thinks I’m in danger for having a boundary.”
  • Reassuring your nervous system: “We’re safe now. We’re allowed to do this.”
  • Offering yourself the same compassion you’d give a friend who is learning a new skill

The goal is not to never feel guilty.

The goal is to stay with yourself kindly when guilt or fear arises, instead of abandoning yourself to make others comfortable.


Things That Can Support This Work

Because embodied self-worth lives in the body, it often responds best to support that honors both mind and nervous system.

You might find it helpful to explore:

  • Somatic therapies (Somatic Experiencing, sensorimotor psychotherapy, body-based EMDR)
  • Parts-based work like Internal Family Systems (IFS), especially if you notice inner parts that panic or shame you when you try to stand up for yourself
  • Coaching or groups centered on religious trauma recovery, where you can practice naming your needs in community
  • Body-based practices that build connection and safety over time: gentle stretching, walking, yoga, dancing alone in your kitchen, or simply placing a hand on your chest and noticing your breath

While it’s unlikely that you’ll ever become perfectly regulated or boundary-proficient at all times, you can begin to slowly and steadily build a relationship with your body where you feel fundamentally safe being yourself most of the time.

Going Deeper

Here are a couple questions to journal about or to unpack during your next therapy session:

  • When you think about embodied self-worth, what images, sensations, or memories come to mind? Are there moments where you caught a glimpse of it in your own life?
  • In what situations do you most easily abandon yourself—by going quiet, appeasing, over-explaining, or minimizing your needs? What might a 5% more self-honoring response look like in those moments?
  • If your body fully believed you were worthy of care, rest, and protection, what is one small thing in your week that might change?

If you feel comfortable sharing, I’d love to hear where this lands for you and what embodied self-worth looks like in your life right now.

Comment below to join the discussion.

© 2025 Religious Harm Recovery