Is it because I was raised as a witness or is it because I was raised by my over-zealous witness mother? I think thats a pretty fine distinction and I'm not sure its important.
My parents, both of them but especially my mom, were adamant about never giving us a compliment. If someone said we had talent in an area, they wouldn't allow it, only saying that the credit could only go to Jehovah. If someone said I was pretty, my mom would say that beauty is only skin deep and I was a rebellious child. If someone said I was smart, my mom or dad would say that wouldn't get me into the new system, or that it wasn't anything to brag about but due to Jehovah.
Yes, our opinions were devalued and still are by most because we are ONLY women. I do think that most fundamentalist religions are similar in this attitude, so I doubt the JW's own it.
Can someone else impact your self esteem? Circumstantial I know, anectdotal for sure. In my case the family was extremely dysfunctional and any attempt to be "better" than the rest was zealously guarded against and I was ripped a new one constantly for it. As a result of that upbringing, I believed that I was too independent (a weakness) and that I needed a STRONG man to control me. So I got exactly that, a big strong abusive man that beat me down with words until what was left of my self-esteem was totally gone.
Now, I did get help, I did get a divorce, and I did go on to have a better life even a wonderful one. I don't blame anyone for anything that has happened to me along the way. All of these bumps in the road are what has made me who I am today, and I happen to like that person. I'm now independent and strong, but I'm also generous to a fault and the type of person people like to talk to about whats bothering them. I feel valued and loved.
So, again, I say, does it really matter? We aren't there now, so lets move on. Life is so good!
Gretchen