Mental Models of Self
Identity influences behavior before behavior reinforces identity.
Shrink Definition
Mental models of self are the internal frameworks people use to understand who they're, what they're capable of, what they value, and how they relate to the world. These models are built over time through experience, relationships, learning, culture, successes, setbacks, and personal reflection. They influence interpretation long before they influence behavior.
Plain language
The story you believe about yourself shapes the decisions you make.
Shrink Insight
People often protect their identity more strongly than they pursue their goals.
Why it matters
Self-models influence: • confidence • resilience • relationships • career choices • leadership • learning • emotional regulation • recovery from setbacks A person's self-model can become either a foundation for growth or a limitation on future possibilities.
Common misunderstanding
Identity isn't fixed. Healthy identities continue evolving throughout life.
Shrink Perspective
Protect your values. Allow your identity to grow.
Shrink Reflection
Which belief about yourself has remained unchanged for years? Does it still deserve to?
Shrink Journal
Complete: "I've always believed I am the kind of person who..." Ask: "Who taught me that?"
Shrink Step
Replace one limiting identity statement with a behavior statement. Instead of: "I'm not confident." Try: "I'm learning to become more confident."
Shrink Minute
Identity should guide growth. Not prevent it.
Shrink Takeaway
The stories you repeatedly tell yourself eventually become the stories you live.
Medical boundary
This concept is educational and shouldn't be used to self-diagnose. It doesn't replace care from a licensed clinician. Symptoms, medication, and treatment decisions should be discussed with a qualified professional, and emergency symptoms require emergency care.
Evidence summary
Research in identity development, developmental psychology, self-schema theory, and narrative psychology demonstrates that self-concept strongly influences motivation, behavior, and adaptation throughout life.
Sources
American Psychological Association (APA); Peer-reviewed scientific literature
Reference status: educational framing