Imperfect, free and happy: Christophe Andre's CBT approach to self-esteem
Christophe André, psychiatrist at Sainte-Anne hospital for decades, made CBT and mindfulness tools accessible to a wide French audience. Imperfect, Free and Happy—his book on self-esteem—has become a reference. He defends a simple but revolutionary thesis: healthy self-esteem isn't a high opinion of oneself, but peace with oneself, including imperfections. This approach breaks with the surrounding performance culture.
The 3 pillars of self-esteem per Christophe André
André distinguishes 3 components, often confused:
1. Self-love
The emotional foundation: feeling worthy of love and respect regardless of performance. This pillar builds early, in attachment experiences. Early deficiency leaves lasting—but repairable—traces in therapy.
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2. Self-view
The gaze on one's qualities and flaws. Healthy view is lucid without being severe. It recognizes strengths without overestimating them and weaknesses without drowning in them.
3. Self-confidence
The belief you can act effectively. This is the behavioral component, most trainable by CBT via mastery experiences (Bandura).
The 3 problematic postures
Christophe André identifies 3 pathological self-esteem relationships:
Low self-esteem: chronic self-devaluation, conviction of not deserving. Linked to depression, social anxiety, affective dependencies. Fragile high self-esteem: appearance of confidence but collapses at first failure. Typical of narcissism: zero tolerance to criticism, permanent validation need. Healthy self-esteem: stable, lucid, benevolent. Can recognize errors without collapsing. Doesn't need comparison.The CBT contribution: concrete work
Restructuring self-critical thoughts
Low self-esteem people's internal dialogue contains recurring schemas: "I'm useless," "I'm worth nothing," "everyone's better than me." CBT doesn't try to replace them with artificial positive thoughts ("I'm great"), but with fair thoughts ("I have strengths and weaknesses, like everyone").
Exercise: at each self-criticism, ask: "would I speak this way to my best friend?". If not—which is almost always the case—reformulate.Exposure to imperfection
Many low-esteem people avoid situations risking to show themselves imperfect: speaking up, negotiating, asking, asserting opinion. These avoidances reinforce fragility conviction.
CBT proposes desensitization experiences: voluntarily showing imperfection in safe contexts, and observing the world doesn't collapse.
Mindfulness as antidote to judgment
Christophe André massively contributed to introducing mindfulness in France. His logic: self-esteem suffers from permanent judgment. Mindfulness teaches observing without judging—including one's own thoughts. This trainable skill transforms inner dialogue quality.
The acceptance paradox
Counter-intuitive: the more you accept imperfections, the more you change. Conversely, the more you fight them, the more they reinforce (principle documented by Steven Hayes's ACT).
André summarizes: "To change, you must first accept what you are. Acceptance isn't resignation: it's the starting point of all evolution."
Practical exercises from the book
3 self-compliments journal
Each evening, note 3 things you did well today. No need for grand things: "I handled that difficult conversation well," "I was patient with my son," "I kept my running commitment."
This simple exercise, practiced 8 weeks, significantly increases self-esteem scores (positive psychology studies).
Compassion letter
Write yourself a letter as if to a dear friend going through the difficulties you're facing. The fictional author distinction bypasses the inner saboteur and accesses a more benevolent voice.
Sitting meditation
Basic mindfulness practice: 10-20 minutes daily, seated, observing breath and passing thoughts without following them. After 8 weeks, studies (Hölzel, 2011) show neurobiological modifications: prefrontal cortex thickening, amygdala reduction.
The over-esteem trap
Christophe André warns against the "high self-esteem" fashion. Studies (Baumeister, 2003) demonstrated artificially high self-esteem people are more aggressive, less empathetic, and less performing long-term than healthy (lucid) self-esteem people.
Therapeutic objective isn't to "boost" self-esteem, but to stabilize it in fairness. Less spectacular but infinitely more solid.
When to consult?
- Chronic self-devaluation (>6 months)
- Systematic avoidance of evaluation situations
- Affective dependency (constant need for reassurance)
- Panic fear of error or judgment
- Paralyzing perfectionism
Takeaway
Healthy self-esteem per Christophe André isn't a fortress but flexibility. It rests on 3 pillars (love, view, confidence) and is trained via precise CBT tools: restructuring, exposure to imperfection, mindfulness. The path isn't performance but lucid acceptance—paradoxical condition of all real change.
If you feel you live under a severe inner gaze, CBT support can help develop this stable and benevolent self-esteem Christophe André describes.

About the author
Gildas Garrec · CBT Psychopractitioner
Certified practitioner in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), author of 16 books on applied psychology and relationships. Over 900 clinical articles published across Psychologie et Sérénité.
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