RESEARCH · SELF-COMPASSION
Self-Compassion — The Evidence Behind Neff's Framework
Self-compassion — treating yourself as you would a friend — outperforms self-esteem-building interventions on depression, anxiety, and self-criticism.
Updated April 2026·5 min read
An important note
This page describes a clinical framework for informational purposes. It is not a substitute for assessment or treatment from a licensed clinician. If you are in crisis, please contact local emergency services or a qualified professional.
TL;DR. Self-compassion — treating yourself as you would a friend — outperforms self-esteem-building interventions on depression, anxiety, and self-criticism.
The three components
Neff's framework defines self-compassion as three interacting components: self-kindness (vs. self-judgment), common humanity (vs. isolation), and mindfulness (vs. over-identification). The measurable construct is the combination, not any single component.
The practical implication is that self-compassion is not just 'being nice to yourself.' It is the combination of kindness, recognition that suffering is universal, and the ability to hold emotion without becoming it.
Relevant research: Neff — Self-Compassion Research.
The evidence
Self-compassion correlates with lower depression and anxiety across many populations. Importantly, it tends to outperform self-esteem interventions — which buy short-term feel-good but are fragile under failure — on long-run wellbeing.
This is the framework Loam uses for sadness and grief prompts, because the evidence base favours self-compassion over cognitive restructuring for self-critical inner states.
Relevant research: Neff — Self-Compassion Research.
How this shows up inside Loam
Other research pillars
Polyvagal theory · Slow breathing · Cyclic sighing · Acceptance and Commitment Therapy · Somatic experiencing · MBSR · Binaural beats.
Or browse the full citations library — every claim on the site, indexed to its primary source.