TLDR: Self-esteem built on comparison—knowing more than others, doing more, having more—is a foundational trap that keeps you trapped in identification with form. Even healthy self-esteem eventually becomes empty because it depends on external reference points and always requires someone who has less or knows less to maintain the good feeling. True worthiness arises not from transcending others but from recognizing the formless dimension in yourself that needs no comparison. Suffering, paradoxically, can dissolve this dependence on form faster than superficial happiness, which keeps you locked in the belief that "life isn't that bad."
The Hidden Dependency: How Self-Esteem Relies on Others Having Less
Most people never examine what their sense of worth actually rests on. Eckhart Tolle identifies a mechanism that operates beneath conscious awareness: conventional self-esteem is fundamentally comparative. To feel good about what you know, what you can do, or what you have, you require a reference point. That reference point is someone who knows less, can do less, or has less.
This begins in childhood. A child jumps further than another child and feels good. The child knows something a peer doesn't and announces it proudly. The child has a toy another doesn't and feels superior. This is a natural stage of development, and there's no point in telling a child to suppress it. But the mechanism persists into adulthood, operating the same way at higher levels of complexity.
In adult life, this plays out as professional achievement, intellectual status, material acquisition. "I know something you don't know. Look how ignorant people are." Or "I have more than you do. I can do something you cannot." The feeling of worthiness arrives through the comparison, through coming out ahead. The satisfaction is real, but it comes with a hidden cost: your sense of who you are depends on others being lower on the scale than you.
Why Healthy Self-Esteem Isn't the Answer
Tolle makes a crucial distinction here. Healthy self-esteem is genuinely preferable to low self-esteem. It's more pleasant to live with confidence in your abilities and knowledge than with shame and self-rejection. The person with healthy self-esteem has a more functional life. This is not being argued away. But the question is whether healthy self-esteem, even when it works perfectly, is ultimately satisfying.
The person with low self-esteem operates from a negative self-image: "I'm no good, everybody is better than me, life has treated me unfairly." The person with healthy self-esteem operates from a positive self-image: "I'm competent, I have achieved things, I know things, I have things." Both, however, are identifications with form. Both depend on comparing the form of who you think you are with the form of others. Both create a psychological structure that seems to provide worth—one through negation, one through affirmation.
And both are fragile. As you age, the things you could once do may no longer be available to you. Abilities decline. Knowledge becomes outdated or less relevant. Material possessions can be lost. The person who built their entire sense of worth on being able to do certain things, know certain facts, or possess certain objects faces a hidden crisis: What am I when I can no longer do that? This is why, Tolle observes, people who achieve great success and material abundance often report an inexplicable emptiness. Not spiritual emptiness, but a practical one: "What's it all about?"
The Trap of Superficial Happiness: Why Success Can Block Transcendence
Here Tolle introduces a counterintuitive observation: the path from suffering to transcendence may be shorter than the path from superficial happiness to transcendence. Why? Because superficial happiness keeps you in the dream world. "It's not that bad. My life's going okay. I got a promotion. I'm quite happy. Just got my annual bonus. I'm doing great."
When life is working, when you're winning the comparison game, there's no urgency to look beyond it. The structure holds. You feel okay. The system works. There's no impetus to question whether this entire basis for worthiness is actually the foundation of your being, or just a game played in form.
By contrast, when suffering is acute—when you fall from the position of comparative advantage, when the structure collapses—you may be moved to question the whole enterprise. A person in genuine suffering may be more available to a radical shift in consciousness than a person comfortably installed in success. The person who has lost everything, who cannot depend on knowing more or having more or being able to do more, is paradoxically closer to liberation.
Transcending Form: The Shift Beyond Self-Esteem
Tolle proposes that as human consciousness evolves, what was once called healthy self-esteem becomes transcended. What replaces it is not a better version of the same thing but something entirely different. He phrases it playfully: "healthy no-hyphen self-esteem"—or perhaps it's better to drop the word "self-esteem" altogether, since the mechanism has fundamentally changed.
True worthiness comes from recognizing something in yourself that is not form. It is not your knowledge, your abilities, your possessions, your accomplishments, or your identity as a person. It is what remains when you subtract all of that—the formless dimension that Tolle calls "the power of life itself." This is not something you achieve or earn. It is something you recognize as already present.
When you are rooted in this formless dimension, something remarkable happens: you stop needing others to be less than you. You still recognize differences in ability, knowledge, and possession—these facts don't disappear. But they no longer determine your worth. And paradoxically, you see the same fundamental worthiness in everyone else, even if they don't recognize it in themselves yet.
The power that arises from this recognition is not comparative power. It's not "I have more power than you do." It's the power of life itself—the power to be, to presence, to respond to what is. And that is available to everyone because everyone is an expression of it, whether they know it or not.
Can Someone Skip Healthy Self-Esteem on the Way to Transcendence?
Tolle is asked whether someone with low self-esteem must first build healthy self-esteem before transcending it altogether. He honestly states he hasn't worked with enough people to know for certain, but suggests it's possible that acute suffering might bypass the intermediate stage.
The logic is sound: if the path from unhappiness to transcendence is easier than the path from superficial happiness to transcendence, then someone in deep suffering who encounters genuine spiritual teaching might leap directly to a recognition of the formless. They don't have the psychological investment in the comparative game. They're not defending a working system. The ground is already unstable.
But this doesn't mean suffering is good or should be sought. Rather, it suggests that when suffering is present, it can be clarifying. It can, with proper understanding and support, accelerate a shift that might take much longer if approached from a position of success and comfort.
The Distinction Between Person and Presence
What emerges from this teaching is a fundamental shift in identity. As long as you identify with the person—with what the person knows, does, has, or is in relation to others—you are locked in form. You are trapped in a system that requires maintenance, comparison, and defense. Your worth is always conditional, always dependent on others being lower on the scale than you are.
When identification shifts to the formless dimension—to presence, to being, to the power of life itself—worthiness is no longer conditional. It doesn't rise and fall with achievement. It doesn't require anyone else's inadequacy to sustain it. And paradoxically, this isn't a loss of self-worth but an infinite expansion of it, because it's no longer bound to the fragile, temporary structures of form.
This is not something to believe in. Tolle's point is that you can examine this directly. Look at what your self-esteem actually rests on. Watch how it depends on external reference points. Notice the emptiness that comes even when it's "working." And through that direct observation, the possibility of something else—something not dependent on form—begins to reveal itself.
Where to Go from Here
If this resonates, the investigation can deepen in several directions. First, observe your own mechanism. Notice when you feel good about yourself and what it actually rests on. Does someone need to be worse off for you to feel good? What happens when you can't compare anymore—when you're alone, or when someone surpasses you?
Second, begin to sense for something in yourself that is not comparative. Not your achievements, knowledge, or possessions, but the presence that is aware of all of it. This isn't mystical—it's available to direct experience. What is here right now that is not about your image or your worth in relation to others?
Third, if you find yourself in a phase of acute suffering, know that this is not a sign of being off the path. It may be an opportunity for a fundamental shift—provided you're willing to question the basis on which you've built your sense of self. With or without a teacher, that questioning is available to you.




