Who are you being mean to?
Three months and over 32,000
views into this blogging experience it finally happened. I received my first negative comment. It didn’t really bother me, well maybe a
little. I was wondering how long it
would take. Right away I thought about
my little nephew, Logan. He’s now a
grown married man but when he was just 5 years old he was scared of having to
ride the school bus for fear of being bullied.
Unfortunately there turned out to be a bully on his bus. That night, as my sister tucked him into bed,
he said he wanted to pray for the bully.
He said that something really bad must be going on in the bully’s life
to make him that way. Following this
incredible example, I prayed for the person who left the negative comment.
When the blog began to
spread outside of my supportive family and friends I knew I was vulnerable to
criticism. If it’s true that vulnerability
is the cornerstone of confidence then hiding behind walls breeds insecurity. This certainly was true with my weight issue. It’s also true that the best way to gain
self-confidence is to do the thing you are afraid to do. Coming clean about my weight struggles was
the most vulnerable thing I’ve ever done but the payoff is that I now feel
so much more confident. The change was
right away. I’m not even close to my
goal weight, which I’ve come to realize has nothing to do with confidence. Owning our story and loving ourselves through
that process is the bravest thing we’ll ever do, no matter what our struggle.
Sometimes criticism can
rock confidence, especially if you are a self-proclaimed people pleaser like me. I was instantly reminded of the quote from
Theodore Roosevelt that Brene’ Brown writes about in her book Daring
Greatly. “It is not the critic who
counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the
doer of deeds could have done them better.
The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face
is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; … who at best
knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at worst, if he
fails, at least fails while daring greatly.”
Brene’ says, “If you’re not in the arena getting your butt kicked too,
I’m not interested in your feedback.”
The question I sought to
answer this week surrounds confidence. What
is it and how do we get more of it? I
feel my level of confidence has grown greatly over the course of this journey
but I seek ways to learn more and find opportunities to grow. If you had more confidence, how would your
life change for the better? I
would have less self doubt. Self doubt
creates distance between where you are and your dreams. I want to feel more present and less like
going through the motions to get through each day. People with high self confidence have a
higher success rate of meeting their goals.
I don’t want anything to hold me back on this journey so this week confidence
is my focus.
There is a recurring
theme with what I discovered in researching confidence and it was a bit
surprising. Self confidence is not a
personality trait and has nothing to do if you are an introvert or an
extravert. It’s not fixed; it comes and
goes. It’s not about positive thinking or a positive mindset. Confidence is a sense of power and certainty
that you can do something. The
definition of confidence is a feeling of trust in yourself. It’s a decision to try, it’s a choice. It’s something you create and it all begins
with action. When God was sprinkling
confidence, it isn’t something you missed out on, it’s a state. It’s not something you have but something you
create. There is no one person who is
always confident all the time. The key
is turning it on when you need it.
How
do you turn on self-confidence?
It starts with your
physical body. Motion impacts
emotion. All emotions come from the way
you use your physical body. If you’re
not feeling confident you don’t have to mentally pump yourself up with a pep
talk. The quickest way to feel confident
is to deliberately move. When you don’t
feel confident, you need to act confident and the feeling will follow. This is in the way you move, your posture and
the way you speak. If you are competent
you can chose confidence. It’s a fake-it-till- you-make-it philosophy. Act confident physically and you will start
to feel it in your mind. Your state of
mind is everything. Move your body in a
confident way and you can put yourself into a state of confidence, no matter
what is happening around you. I could
feel a difference in myself when I noticed I was slumped over and I intentionally
stood up tall. I did it several times
this past week and it works! It changed
the way I felt. Stand up tall, hold your
head up and speak up. Choose to act
confident even if you don’t feel it yet.
Confidence is also impacted by what we choose to focus on. There is a huge difference between what you hope happens versus what you expect to happen. You build confidence when you expect the results you are after, not when you hope for it. We create what we focus on so don’t just hope for the results you want. When you expect it to happen you build confidence but how do we create that level of belief to expect results? This is impacted by four elements potential, action, results and beliefs.
"If you want to be confident, but don't normally act that way, today, just this once, act in the physical world the way you believe a confident person would."
Wayne Dyer
Confidence is also impacted by what we choose to focus on. There is a huge difference between what you hope happens versus what you expect to happen. You build confidence when you expect the results you are after, not when you hope for it. We create what we focus on so don’t just hope for the results you want. When you expect it to happen you build confidence but how do we create that level of belief to expect results? This is impacted by four elements potential, action, results and beliefs.
We all have unlimited
potential but many of us often fall short of tapping into our full potential. Our results are based on the actions we take and
the impact of our actions is based on what we believe about ourselves. If we don’t take enough action, we limit our
potential. The problem is that action
alone is not enough. If we don’t believe
in ourselves our actions will be weak and will not yield results. This can reinforce our own negative beliefs
and we find ourselves doing the very least to get by. Success starts with our beliefs. The opposite is also true. If we believe in ourselves we produce strong
results. This leads to a strong belief that
we know we can do something more and that taps into greater potential. We’ll then take a lot more action and the
results are even greater. This creates
momentum of strong positive beliefs cycling into greater success driving to a
whole new level. A self- fulfilling
prophecy can go both ways.
Confidence also grows
when we push ourselves outside of our comfort zone. I’m very familiar with that feeling like a
fake and that others are about to find out I’m a fraud. I found in my research that this feeling actually
has a name and it’s called the imposter syndrome. The imposter syndrome is feeling like you are
faking your way through your accomplishments; feeling afraid someone is going
to find you out and believe you don’t deserve or haven’t earned your success. Only when you commit to trying that you will
have breakthroughs in the skill of confidence.
Imposter syndrome is a good thing.
The only way to get rid of those feelings is to try. You’ll never get rid of those feelings by
thinking about it; you’ll only get rid of them by doing something about it. If you’re not feeling like a fake in some
area of your life then you’re not growing.
Embrace it, without it there is no growth. The next time you do it, it’ll be
better. It’s uncomfortable but worth it. All progress takes place outside of your
comfort zone.
When asked about confidence
as it relates to his competitive power lifting, my husband Dan said that his confidence
comes from his level of preparedness. His self-confidence
for competing comes from his discipline to prepare. He said when he walks into the meet, there
may be guys stronger than him but he knows no one else is going to be more
prepared. He said it’s easy to spot the
guys who go there and try to wing it.
They fail miserably. It takes a
strong discipline to prepare and that’s where people fall short. He said his performance from training in the
gym is a huge confidence builder. This is what gives him the confidence to go
for the stretch goal of lifting a weight that perhaps he’s never achieved prior
but has a good shot at because he’s done the work. He said if you prepare hard enough and do the
work you just let your body take over. I
think that applies to a lot more in life than lifting a huge amount of weight!
Confidence Building Exercise #1: Memory Management
Confidence levels grow
when we think about our past accomplishments.
We just need to manage our memories better. Think about those times when you didn’t think
you could pull something off but you did.
I was challenged to come up with five of my greatest successes in
life. It needs to be from those times
that looked dark and difficult. Write down
these stories and write a paragraph on each.
The purpose is to use these examples to remind yourself that no matter
what is going on you have the ability to find a way.
I encourage you to
literally write out a paragraph about each of them. I was just thinking about them at first but
when I sat down, pen in hand, I truly uncovered insights that I didn’t
realize. My mind first automatically went
straight to the major failures of my life.
This process revealed that many of my greatest successes were in the
recovery of these failures. The act of writing
about these events helped me see that every success came at a price. Sacrifice and hard work was a major
component. One required I swallow my
pride and ask for forgiveness as well as offer it. The point of this exercise is to show that you
deserve to feel confident. I learned
that I am a heck of a lot stronger than I think I am. It’s clear there are areas of my life I am
more confident than other areas but action is where it begins. It’s a paradigm shift to realize that
confidence is a skill I can develop instead of something I’m missing. We’ve got control over it and we have the
ability to grow it. It’s like a muscle,
the more you use it the stronger it gets.
Confidence Building Exercise #2: Picture Power
This week my Mom
reminded me of how far I’ve come. She
said it amazes her to see what I’m doing now knowing what I went through as a
little girl. I was so desperately shy
and lacking in confidence that I physically would get sick at school. Every single day they would have to call my
Mom to come get me from the nurse’s office.
I still remember the feeling like it was yesterday. I was petrified that the teacher would call
on me. I remember knowing the answers
but the utter fear that I would have to answer aloud in class made me
physically ill. After going to several
specialists to figure out what was wrong with my stomach, it was our small
hometown doctor that suggested to my Mom that she enroll me in dance class to
build my confidence. The rest is
history. I will forever be grateful to
my Mom for helping me find a way out of that darkness.
I put this picture on my
desk at home. This is me during those
times of daily calls to Mom to come get me.
Whenever I feel like I’m lacking self confidence I just look into her
eyes and immediately feel compassion when I see her. I do this when I feel critical, start to
worry what other people may think, think I’m not doing enough or that I’m not
enough. I encourage you to do the
same. It’s a game changer. Anytime I think that way – this is who I’m being
mean to.
Fred Astaire kept a memo
over his fireplace from an MGM testing director after his first screen test
that said, “Can’t act. Slightly
bald. Can dance a little.” Colossians 3:1-4 says, “Who I am in Christ
matters more than what I think or what other people tell me about myself.”
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