Your self-esteem can play havoc on your life if it is on the
lower side of the scale. It can be changed by changing
your attitude. There are times in everyone’s life that we
feel a little down, down on our luck and probably a little low
on self-esteem, especially when we feel our relationships are
in disarray. Isn’t it true that you could deal even with
your boring job when your heart is feeling good? But if
last night’s date went bad, well…nothing is right. This
article focuses on ways to improve your strengths and tip the
scales in your favor.
Super Self Confidence - How To Lose It
And How You Can Get It
Back
by: Steven Harold
It is well worth discussing what self-confidence is, before
describing how you can change your low self confidence into
healthier and empowering confidence.
As human beings, we action many tasks automatically and
without having to think too much about it. An example would be
riding a bike. Even though we might have gone through a few
years of not using a bike, if we needed to, we would not find
any difficulty in getting back on a bicycle and riding again.
This is because we have done it so many times before that we
know just what to do and do not have to give it too much
conscious thought. So if you were to ask someone, how confident
are you that you can ride a bike, as long as they had learnt to
ride a bike in the past, they would probably say 'very
confident'. They feel confident about it because they have done
it many many times successfully before. In fact they now give
very little thought to actions required to ride a bike. It all
happens automatically.
This can be called a type of self confidence. Knowing
something so well, that as the saying goes, you could do it
with your eyes closed or you know it like the back of your
hand.
Now when someone says that they have low confidence, they
can so easily make the mistake of encompassing their whole life
with this label. They might even say 'I never have any
confidence in myself'. By saying this out loud to others who
will listen, or even thinking it to themselves, they will be
setting up a self-fulfilling prophecy. The label you give
yourself or the label you accept as being true will invariably
mean that you start to fit yourself to that label, and, can
make it your own living reality.
However, that person above will be able to successfully
accomplish many things confidently but, and here is the big
'but' they will not use these successes as evidence of
confidence. They will dismiss or belittle them in some way
(e.g. saying "I was lucky") so that they can maintain this need
to say they have no confidence. This is a pity as it is only
through taking a realistic view of what happens in their world,
will they then be able to feel more confident about
themselves.
It can be quite startling how someone will say they have no
confidence and yet 5 minutes later they will tell you about
some amazing things that they do such as talking in front of
10,000 people, or they go mountain climbing. Despite
undertaking these events, which ordinarily seem nerve-wracking
events, they may still say that they have low confidence.
So confidence or the lack of it, has a lot to do with how
you view yourself. If this is the case then really it is down
to a perception. Perceptions are not a true reflection of
reality all of the time. Often perceptions, even between just 2
people, can be remarkably different even though these 2 people
have in reality, experienced exactly the same thing.
Perceptions are the filters we use to process what happens
around us. Our perceptions can make us feel good, bad or
indifferent. They can give us a boost of energy or deflate us
into an anxious and fearful mass. Our perceptions have
power.
Our perceptions are, more often than not, based on our past
conscious and subconscious experiences. They are our way of
analysing what happens around and enabling us to decide the
implications for us. When experiencing anything, our minds will
very quickly compare the current experience to past experiences
and, these past experiences will indicate how we should react
to this current experience. If we have had a bad experience
that seems very similar to the current experience, we will feel
in a similar way to the feeling we associated with that past
bad experience.
So our perceptions are based on past experiences and what we
have learned from them.
This gives us a clue about how we can change and become more
confident. Our perceptions can be so inaccurate and if they
were formed at a young age may also have lacked understanding.
Most of us have had the experience of perceiving someone or
some situation in a particular way, only to realise that we got
it completely wrong. With this in mind, although our
perceptions are a form or protection and are meant to enable us
to weigh up a situation quickly, they can also be wholly
inaccurate.
Healthy and robust self-confidence begins by accepting that
your perception of yourself may be wrong in certain matters.
For example, some friends will be astounded when someone
announces (may be on a drunken evening), that they have low
confidence. These friends will say will all sincerity that they
find this hard to believe as they always appear confident and
in control. Yet that person will still insist that they lack
confidence. Obviously the signals that they are externalising
are not the same as those that they are internalising. Often
the person who appears to be the most confident and out-going
will have terrible doubts and internal conflicts. The external
bravado will be their way of masking how they feel inside.
Balanced self-confidence begins by admitting and accepting
more evidence of what you can do well. It also begins by
accepting positive and complimentary comments made to you as
well as other forms of evidence. In the past you may have
dismissed a positive comment that was said to you because you
didn't know how to handle it. You may even have made a joke of
it or tried to dig up the tiniest fragment of evidence as to
why you don't deserve such praise. Many people say something
like this 'Oh, it was nothing'.
It would be virtually impossible to retain your
self-confidence if you are someone who always dismisses or
belittles their achievements. So make up your mind from today
not to do it. Decide from this moment onwards to say just two
words when someone says something nice or complimentary to. The
two words are 'thank you'. Try it out next time and see how you
feel about it. It will help you start to feel the confidence
that has always been theyre waiting for you.
About The Author
Steven Harold
Clininical Hypnotherapist http://www.hypnosources.com
Confidence Hypnosis Cd
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