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Self
Confidence
by Chris Wesley
What is Self Confidence?
Self confidence comes when you are comfortable with who you are in the
world. You feel worthwhile, with a right to occupy your place in the
world. You feel capable, competent, relaxed, happy, energetic and
positive.
People with high self confidence are likely to be successful and
popular. They will be living their lives on their own terms - having a
high degree of control over their environments. They will work in a job
they enjoy, hold friends whose company they enjoy, live in a home they
love with a partner they love.
High levels of self confidence give people inner strength, making them
more resilient than others. They will be more in touch with what they
want, and more motivated to go out into the world and get it. They will
weather the inevitable setbacks better, and apply more stamina to
breaking through the resistance into their chosen world.
Sounds good, huh?
Why Is Self Confidence Sometimes Low?
Personalities are formed in our early years. Before the age of 11 (some
say before the age of 7) the major building blocks off our
personalities are laid down. It is upon these blocks that the rest of
our lives is founded.
During these formative years, the there are two major factors
influencing the formation of our personalities:
Parenting
Schooling
Unfortunately, these activities don't always go smoothly. Let's first
consider parenting.
Self Confidence & Parenting
Most parents didn't read the manual. They may have been very young and
inexperienced, with little support from their own parents. They may be
highly stressed by work, relationships, financial pressures and so on.
They may be overwhelmed by the parenting burden, and they may also be
damaged by their own parents.
Even the most loving and balanced of parents will propagate problems
from their own environments and personalities, into the minds of their
children. And average or struggling parents may do far worse.
Children are, by definition -
learning how to do everything - they don't come pre-skilled. If parents
are impatient and critical with their learning offspring, they will
wear down a child's sense of competency, instilling the notion that
they are natural failures.
If parents are openly angry,
their children will learn that the world is full of angry people, and
that much of what life has to offer is painful and frightening. Now
when you consider that - in a child's eyes, their parents are
all-knowing GODS who cannot be wrong, you'll come to see how children
can be devastated by the parenting process.
They will come to know that they
no good at anything, and that failure attracts anger and pain. That's
how poor parenting builds a child with low self confidence. And a child
with low self confidence grows up - almost inevitably - to be an adult
with low self confidence.
If you are a parent or working in education, please carefully consider
the impact of every interaction you have with children and try to grow
happy and successful people with high self confidence.
Self Confidence & Schooling
Even if your parents are pretty good, your school is probably going to
bite you. Young children are raw human beings who have not yet been
"civilized" in the ways of not being cruel, selectively articulating
their thoughts. If they see that you have a big birth mark on your
face, they are going to mention it, and they may already have learned
to make fun of it, and to gather in groups based on social fit - the IN
crowd and the OUT crowd. This is all natural playground stuff, but it
is also a jungle where the vulnerable can learn some dreadful truths
about the world. Principally, they learn that they are in the OUT
crowd, and that the IN crowd are going to make them suffer for it.
Self Confidence & Beliefs
So, with one of both of these environments delivering many negative
messages to a young child, you can see how damage can be done. Young
children are especially vulnerable, because they have have no broader
context by which they can dismiss the poor behaviour of others as
irrelevant, and they have few personal skills to limit the damage. They
will simply drink in those negative messages and swallow hard. This
critical period in a child's is where their beliefs are laid down.
Let's reflect on what belief is. A belief is something you KNOW is
true, without needing to think about why you believe it. Beliefs can be
so entrenched and permanent that we don't even know that we hold them.
Yet they sit there in our heads, silently directing our behaviour.
They tell us that we're not
meant to be successful, that we can't find a good-looking partner and
so shouldn't try, that taking risks is always a bad idea, that the
world is a scary place, that any group we might aspire to belong to is
going to reject us, because we're in the OUT crowd. In such a world,
what's the point in trying? It's just a recipe for misery.
I know from my coaching practice the truly astonishing power of
beliefs. Here's an example:
Geoff is intelligent and a competent professional, but in social
situations he considers himself something of a disaster, and his life
is a much smaller one than he would prefer because of it. He is
struggling with two sides of his self. One wants to be outgoing and
fun-loving; the other fears rejection. Unfortunately, this latter half
seems to be in charge. So one half of Geoff keeps putting himself in
promising situations then his other half keeps sabotaging them. Geoff
is very frustrated and out of ideas.
Whilst coaching Geoff, it became clear that Geoff was apparently blind
to a whole raft of things he could do to build friendships in social
situations. Through very careful questioning, I was able to uncover
some interesting history.
As a child, Geoff had a minor physical abnormality and was taunted in
the playground. At that time, Geoff learned two things about life:
1. He was ugly
2. People are cruel
More than 30 years later, Geoff still held these beliefs. In other
words, he acted on the basis that he knew they were true. Though parts
of his intellect knew that the facts did not support these beliefs, he
continued to hold them inside, from where they drove his destructive
behaviour. Before coaching he did not consciously know any of this.
Through some challenging dialogue about options, Geoff recognised that
he was ruling out hugely productive things he might do in social
situations, because they could not work. And they could not work,
because HE WAS UGLY, AND PEOPLE ARE CRUEL. Geoff began a difficult
process of un-learning these beliefs and now has a growing repertoire
of social skills. He is taking more social risks and doing more things
socially. He’s beginning to sparkle. He’s finally becoming the person
he felt sure deep down, that he ought to be, or perhaps always was.
Building Self Confidence
If you have low self confidence, then there is a great deal of work
that we can do to improve matters dramatically. As your coach, I will
work with you via our weekly phone sessions. We will determine what
makes you say you have low self confidence. We will identify the impact
of your problem on your life.
We'll then explore the thinking
behind your behaviour, teasing out your hidden beliefs. When we have
those out in the open, we can confer about them. Are they rational? Are
they born out by evidence in the real world? Believe me - rationality
has little to do with anything in here, because beliefs are formed by
young children and inherited by adults who do not even realise they
have these beliefs.
Isolating irrational hidden beliefs is a very important step, and in my
view, it's almost impossible to do it yourself. You cannot be
objective, and those beliefs are too much a part of your personal
make-up.
So what then - are you "fixed"? Bizarrely, not usually. Step one is to
realise that deep down, you operate from the belief that, for example,
you are ugly.
Step two is to recognise that there is no evidence in the outside world
to support this conclusion. This step is usually complicated, because -
if you think you're ugly - your mind will find a way to make it appear
true. How? OK - here's how. Let's say that an attractive person shows
an interest in you.
Since you know you're ugly, you
know you're misreading the signs, or else they're playing some cruel
game, (you also know that most people are cruel). So, you look away.
So, the attractive person thinks you're not interested and moves on.
You have just proved you're ugly - an attractive person passed you by.
Even having understood this, you're still not home, but you're really
making progress. The next obstacle is your behavioural repertoire -
that set of things you typically do in the world. Also known as your
comfort zone. So now you know that you've felt you are ugly, and you
recognise that you've been doing things (ignoring approaches from nice
people) to re-enforce that belief. So - you'll just stop doing those
things, right?
Well, yes, but believe me - you are going to resist like crazy! Your
intellect will tell you what to do, but every fibre in your being is
going to scream NOOOOOO! I DON'T DO THIS! I CAN'T DO THIS!
We'll work on this together, finding ways to stretch your comfort zone.
Taking small opportunities for you to operate in new ways, and to
sample what the world gives you back. Over time, you'll change.
Your old beliefs will be
loosened then lost, and your comfort zone will become vast compared to
the old one you used to live in. You'll start to feel confident in new
situations and then you'll start joining up these new situations and
you'll become self confident. You can work on your own for a while, and
check back with me when you need to.
This is exciting, life-changing, world-changing stuff! A bit scary,
too, but you can do it, and you owe it to yourself to get started!
Of course, as you read this - guess what's happening? Yep - your
current beliefs are holding you back. Telling you that people don't
really change. That your life has to carry on as it is. That you could
not ever have, and do not deserve a fantastic life with high self
confidence and all that goes with it.
So I hope you can find a way to silence that inner voice for long
enough to pick up the phone and call me!
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An honours graduate of
Electronics & computing, Chris Wesley is also a
Professionally-qualified life coach, graduating with distinction from
the UK's largest caoching academy. He is also a business consultant and
mentor, a freelance writer, and founder of http://www.LetsFixBritain.com.
Prior to going freelance, Chris
worked for 17 years in management positions for blue-chip
multinationals, where he learned all about the successful real-world
management of change, of people, strategies and budgets.
These days Chris divides his time between his various interests. His
creativity and sense of humour combine with his extensive corporate
experience to bring powerful resources to all of his clients.
If you would like to move your personal or professional life into a new
era of power and happiness, contact Chris to explore possibilities or
to arrange a consultation at http://www.uklifecoaching.org
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Chris_Wesley
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