“With realization of one’s own potential & self confidence in one’s ability, one can build a better world.” ~Dalai Lama
For the vast majority of my life I didn’t believe I
could do most of the things I wanted to do.
I knew I wanted to be in a relationship, but I
feared that if I got into one I’d do something to mess it up.
I wanted to perform on Broadway, but even moving to
New York City didn’t give me the courage to audition.
I wanted to be a writer, but I thought it was far
too difficult to get published and therefore didn’t even try until my late
twenties.
Maybe you’ve never been as unsure of yourself as I
used to be, but you can likely relate to that feeling of wanting to do
something but feeling terrified to start. This not only limits your
potential in life; it also minimizes your ability to make a positive impact on
the world around you.
There’s a lot that goes into overcoming those
fears. You may need to challenge limiting beliefs formed years ago, or
take yourself out of a situation where other people undermine your abilities.
One thing that will definitely help is working on your confidence.
Not sure if confidence can be learned? I asked this question on the Tiny Buddha
Facebook page to see what readers had to say and then used some of
their responses to shape the steps outlined below:
1. Tap into the confidence you
were born with.
I feel it’s something that is always there,
something you’re born with that gets lost along the way, or stolen by others.
Sometimes you have to dig deep to find it again. ~Amy Lee Tempest
You didn’t come out of the womb unsure of your cry
or insecure about your large umbilical cord. You came out blissfully unaware of
external judgment, concerned only with your own experience and needs. I’m not
suggesting that you should be oblivious to other people. It’s just that it may
help to remember confidence was your original nature before time started
chiseling away at it.
Once you developed a sense of self-awareness, you
started forming doubts and insecurities about how other people saw you. You
learned to crave praise and avoid criticism, and maybe you started getting down
on yourself if you got more of the latter than the former.
When you start feeling unsure of yourself remember:
we were all born with confidence, and we can all get it back if we learn to
silence the thoughts that threaten it.
2. Know your strengths and
weaknesses.
As you learn who you are, you gain confidence in
your strengths and also learn your weaknesses. ~Angela Birt
Learning who you are doesn’t happen overnight. For
one thing, it can be hard to know which parts of you are you, and which
parts are who you think you should be.
A good start is to identify your strengths and
weaknesses and then weigh those against what you enjoy. (If you’re great in
sales, but you actually can’t stand sales jobs, then it doesn’t really matter
if you have confidence there. Unless it’s all about ego—but does that really
make you happy?)
It might help to list five things you do well that
you enjoy and five things you’d like to do well. Make an effort to utilize some
of the first list and work on some of the second every day. As you use your
strengths and improve where there’s room to grow, you’ll develop both
confidence and fulfillment simultaneously.
3. Expect success.
Confidence comes from success…But confidence also
combines another quality because you can be successful, yet lack confidence. It
requires a mental attitude shift to an expectation of success. And this alone,
can bring about more success, reinforcing the confidence. It spirals from
there. ~Jason Hihn
It might seem strange to say expect success
since you can’t predict the future, but don’t we do the alternative all the
time? Have you ever gone into a stressful situation assuming the worst—that
something would go wrong?
Conventional wisdom suggests it’s smart to expect
the worst because you won’t be disappointed if you fail and you’ll be
pleasantly surprised if you succeed. But research suggests this isn’t universally true.
Pessimism can undermine your performance creating a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Find the successes in every day and you’ll notice
over time that they increase.
4. Trust your capabilities.
Confidence comes not from knowing you know
everything, but from knowing you can handle what comes up. ~Donn King
No one in the world knows everything. Everyone is
good at some things and not so good at others. Don’t weigh your security
against what you know or can do; weigh it against your willingness and capacity
to learn.
If someone criticizes you, take it is an
opportunity to improve. If someone does better than you, see it as an
opportunity to learn from them. If you fall short at something, realize you can
get closer next time. Don’t worry if you’re not confident in what you can do
now—be confident in your potential.
5. Embrace the unknown.
Confidence comes from a space of humility. It is
spawned when we dare to see the world through an alternate lens. It grows when
we have the courage to embrace the experience of the unknown and the
unknowable. ~Hana Lee
People often think confidence means knowing you can
create the outcome you desire. To some extent it does, but this idea isn’t
universally true for anyone. No matter how talented, smart, or capable you are,
you cannot predict or control everything that happens in your life.
Even confident people lose jobs, relationships, and
sometimes, their health.
Confidence comes from knowing your competence but
acknowledging it’s not solely responsible for creating your world. When you
take that weight off your shoulders and realize that sometimes the twists and
turns have nothing to do with what you did or should have done, it’s easier to
feel confident in what you bring to the table.
6. Take risks.
Confidence is a funny thing. You go out and do the
thing you’re most terrified of, and the confidence comes afterwards.
~Christopher Kaminski
If you always do things as you’ve always done them
of course you won’t feel confident.
When I first moved to San Francisco, I was highly
insecure with relationships. I’d moved a lot and spent years hopping around the
country partly to avoid getting close to anyone. Eventually I realized the only
way out was through. I’d never be good at relationships if I didn’t jump in,
get messy, and learn what to do and not to do.
I had to crawl, walk, fall, and repeat to get
comfortable with vulnerability and conflict. I made tons of mistakes, and a lot
of it hurt. But I live a peopled life now, and it’s worth all the discomfort it
took to get here.
7. Learn to receive praise.
Confidence is earned through positive recognition
and reinforcement. ~Don La Franchi
It’s amazing how easy it is to believe all the
negative things people say and yet discredit the positive. Taking a compliment
is an art. Sometimes, it’s instinctive to assume they’re just being nice or
that maybe you aren’t really skilled—you just got lucky.
Occasionally, this may be true, but for the most
part you earn the praise you receive. Don’t talk yourself out of believing it.
Instead, recycle it into confidence. You did a fantastic job on your project at
work; that means you can do it again. You had an amazing performance; that
means you can trust you’re talented.
Other people want you to succeed. Now you just have
to believe them when they show you you’re worthy.
8. Practice confidence.
It can be practiced—and with that practice you will
get better. ~Jacqueline Wolven
Like anything else in life, your confidence will
improve with practice. A great opportunity to do this is when you meet new
people. Just like if you were the new kid in school, they have no idea who you
are—meaning you have an opportunity to show them.
As you shake their hand, introduce yourself, and
listen to them speak, watch your internal monologue. If you start doubting
yourself in your head, replace your thoughts with more confident ones. Ask
yourself what a confident person would do and then try to emulate that.
Watch your posture and your tone. Hunching and
mumbling will make you feel and look less confident, so stand up and speak
slowly and clearly.
People are more apt to see you how you want to be
seen if they suspect you see yourself that way.
—
You may have confidence in some areas and not in
others; that’s how it works for most of us. Draw from those areas where you’re
self assured.
If you feel inadequate in professional situations,
recall how it feels physically when you’re confident in relationships. If
you’re insecure in love, access what you feel when you’re comfortable around
friends.
Above all, remember you are capable and worthy—just
as much as anyone else, regardless of what you’ve achieved, regardless of what
mistakes you’ve made. Knowing that intellectually is the first step to
believing it in your heart. Believing it is the key to living it. And living it
is the key to reaching your potential.
I hope I can encourage someone today to chase their dreams today. Have a blessed week guys..
source:tinybuddha.com
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