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Self
Confidence Tips
1)
How to Feel Good When You Need to
Because feeling good has a major 'hormonal' element, you can re-create the
way you feel by re-living times you felt good. If you can remember a time
you had great self confidence, then excellent - use that! If not, then use a
time you felt contented or happy. This process of taking deliberate control
of the content of your thoughts and emotions will have an impact on your
self confidence and other areas of your life.
2) Beating Self Consciousness, Confidence Enemy No.1
Although useful for learning about the impact you have on others, too much
self consciousness is the No.1 enemy of self confidence. The trick is to be
able to keep your attention off yourself when you need to. Here's how...
a) When you feel self-conscious, (you can usually tell because you
start to feel anxious), choose something outside of yourself to focus on and
study it in detail. For example: examine a door, look at the different
textures and shades of colour, wonder about who made it and how and so on.
The important thing is that you're learning how to keep your attention off
yourself.
It is a good idea to practise this technique in private first. Just sit
quietly, practising focusing firstly on your own thoughts and then
deliberately focusing outwards onto a picture or piece of furniture.
b) Social self confidence can be difficult to find sometimes because
it is unclear what you are 'supposed to do'. In this event, concentrate on
what your purpose in the situation is. Whether you're there to:
find out if you like the other people present
make others feel comfortable
find out some information
make business contacts
and so on...
It's much more difficult to feel self-conscious if your mind is occupied
with a task.
People are often most comfortable with others when working towards a common
goal. The common goal of socialising could be making friends, the exchange
of mutually beneficial information, expanding your knowledge of different
types of people... it could be whatever you want it to be! The key is to
have an aim.
Read the complete article on self consciousness.
3) Watch Out for Undue Criticism - Especially Your Own!
Have you noticed that people will speak to themselves in a way they would
never speak to others? You know the sort of thing - you drop a cup and it's
"You stupid idiot. You can't do anything right can you?"
Criticism that leaves the receiver feeling upset or depressed is rarely
useful.
Challenging your own assumptions about yourself and other people can be
really helpful in building self confidence. Here's a few to get you started:
a) Those confident-looking people have bad moments too - you just
don't get to hear about them!
b) If you feel under-confident, it doesn't mean other people can
tell. They're often too caught up with their 'own stuff' to notice!
c) If you catch yourself saying things to yourself like "I'm no good
at anything" then rest assured, you're wrong about that. Everyone can
compose a sentence, get successfully to the store, eat without choking and
do a million other things. Emotion can make things seem hopeless when they
rarely are.
Don't let yourself make sweeping statements about yourself - in the long run
it is this sort of thing that can really damage your self image. If this
happens, say to yourself calmly and gently, "Hold on a minute, that's not
true". If you can come up with some evidence that disproves the sweeping
statement, then even better. It may take a bit of effort at first, but the
impact on your self confidence levels is huge.
Building self esteem is not just about thinking good of yourself, it's about
not thinking bad for no reason!
d) Just because you have felt bad about yourself in the past doesn't
mean you're always going to feel that way. I have seen hundreds of people
surprise themselves once they have learned how to build self confidence in a
way that it stays built!
The important thing is to get away from thinking "Why did that happen?", or
"Why do I feel this way?" and towards "How would I like to feel?", "In what
situations do I feel confident?" or, "What do I need to learn in order to
have better self confidence in this situation?"
This change in thinking is so important that we devote quite a bit of time
to it on the Self Confidence Trainer.
e) Persevere and don't expect everything at once. Really learn how to
develop your self confidence by following the tips from this site and the
free Self Confidence Course and notice the small differences as they happen.
Building good self confidence is a wonderful thing, and it's much easier
than you'd imagine.
Article by Roger Elliott, author of the Free Self Confidence Course |