Self-improvement is crucial to a happy, healthy life.
Of course, you already know that.
But with everyone screaming “self-improvement!” all the time, it’s hard to understand what that means for you.
We can help. As a certified life coach, I help people identify areas for improvement and guide them on their journeys.
Discover what self-improvement means for your life and how to achieve it.
What is Self-Improvement
Self-improvement is the process of making yourself better through specific actions. It spans nearly any category you can think of, from physical fitness to academics, soft skills to personality.
What Should You Improve?
Deciding where to improve is a deeply personal choice. Most people seek improvement because they wish to enhance their lives in the following areas:
- Social
- Relationships
- Career
- Financial/Lifestyle
- Fulfillment
Consider how development in a particular area might help you achieve your goals.
Broad Categories for Self-Improvement
These ten broad personal growth categories can help you identify where to improve.
Physical
Physical improvement helps you achieve the body and look you want. It makes you comfortable in your own skin.
Although most people think of weight loss and fitness when discussing physical self-improvement, it encompasses far more. Anything from better hygiene practices to haircuts, style, and wardrobe can fall into this category.
Advancement in the physical includes anything you want to change about your physical appearance that will boost your confidence.
Health & Wellness
Self-improvement in health & wellness transcends the physical. It’s about feeding your body nutritious foods, caring for your mental health, and loving yourself.
Health & wellness could also include seeing doctors or therapists, self-care, quitting bad habits, or shifting to a healthier lifestyle.
Mental
Developing your mental arena revolves around fortitude. It includes taking on challenges and overcoming obstacles.
Mental self-improvement might involve a mindset shift, facing your fears, or overcoming your insecurities.
Skills
Often, self-improvement is about building new skills or enhancing the ones you have. You might practice a hobby or learn how to do something different.
It also includes building soft skills and career skills.
Financial
When we talk about financial self-improvement, we’re not talking about picking up a side hustle or increasing your savings.
It’s about your personal relationship with money, not how much money you have.
Financial self-improvement helps you control your money rather than your money control you.
Interpersonal
Improving your interpersonal relationships could help you learn to communicate or interact with others in healthier ways. It might also help you prioritize the relationships that are most important to you, teaching you ways to show other people how much you value them.
Emotional
Emotional improvement can help you identify and manage your own emotions or help you build empathy for others.
Spiritual
Spiritual improvement helps you get in touch with your spiritual side. You may want to get more involved with your religious group if you’re religious. If you’re not, you may want to explore your inner spirituality through meditation.
Education
Educational improvement is about achieving academic success. You can get an advanced degree or take classes in a specific subject.
Esteem
Self-improvement in esteem brings pride and accomplishment. Improving your esteem can lead to respect from your peers and confidence in yourself.
How to Improve Yourself
Now that you have a broad idea of where you can improve, it’s time to get to work.
These steps will help you see gains in any facet of your life.
Identify What Needs Improvement
The first step is to identify your self-improvement goals. What area do you want to improve in? Where do you need to get better?
Sometimes, our egos get in the way of this step. We’re perfect – we don’t need to improve!
Turn that self-talk off. Everyone can improve, no matter how perfect you think you are.
There are three easy ways to determine what you need to work on:
- Shadow work
- Journaling
- Coaching/mentorship
Shadow work
Shadow work forces you to confront the parts of yourself you strive to keep hidden. You must confront the darkest versions of yourself: your greed, anger, lust, and pride.
You can only improve upon the worst aspects of yourself if you know what they are.
Journaling
Journaling helps us organize our thoughts and ideas. When you aren’t sure where to start, grab your journal and brain dump.
Write out everything you like about yourself, your goals, strengths, and weaknesses. Use your journal to identify where you are and where you want to be.
Once it’s all laid out, you can clearly see the areas you need to improve.
Coaching/Mentorship
Sometimes, you can’t identify where you need to grow on your own. It’s okay to seek help.
A coach or a mentor can guide you on your self-improvement journey. They can help you determine where you want to be and share advice for achieving that goal.
Typically, mentorship is based on overall personal growth, while coaching is specific to a particular area of self-improvement. Mentors help you with all aspects of your life and form a more personal bond with their mentees, while coaches focus on specific goals.
Decide What You Can Do
We can’t always improve in the ways we want. You may want to earn an MBA to enhance your career prospects, but you may not have the time or money to pursue it at the moment.
Part of your self-improvement journey is determining what you can work on now and prioritizing it.
Look at all the areas you want to improve and decide where to focus. Consider what options have the fewest barriers and most significant impacts.
Make an Action Plan
Now that you know where you want to improve, you need to make an action plan to get there.
Transform your self-improvement ideas into SMART goals. Set deadlines. Decide how you will get from where you are to where you need to be.
Do the Work
Self-improvement takes work. You know what you want and have a plan to make it a reality, so now it’s time to dive in and do the work.
If you want to improve physical fitness, you must hit the gym. If you want to improve a skill, you need to practice.
Anything worth doing is worth working for. Now is the time to put in the effort.
Review Your Progress
Regular progress reviews are crucial to successful self-improvement.
Set aside time every three months to review your progress. Determine if your actions are leading to the type of improvement you seek.
You may need to adjust your action plan to ensure your actions align with your goals.
Keep Improving
Self-improvement is a lifelong journey. It never stops.
No one is perfect. We all have areas we could improve upon. Life’s greatest joy is accomplishing those self-improvement goals.
If you want to be happy, you should always strive for self-improvement.
More Self-Improvement Topics
If you’re looking for one simple article to win at self-improvement, I must tell you you’re doing self-improvement wrong.
You can’t improve by reading a 2000-word article on self-improvement. It’s too broad.
Our goal here was to help you understand what self-improvement is and what it takes to get started.
The rest is up to you – but we can help.
Partners in Fire has loads of resources on self-improvement to guide you on your journey.
Explore:
- How to Find Your Passion
- 33 Ways to Improve Your Life Starting Today
- How To Love Yourself
- Hard Ways To Fix Your Life
- Healthy Lifestyle Habits
- Boosting Productivity
- How to be Happy
I’m also a certified happiness life coach, so if you need even more help, book an exploratory session by emailing melanie@partnersinfire.com.
I offers a 30-minute free consultation to determine if life coaching will help you improve.
Self-improvement is within reach!