Your thoughts about you.
How many of us want to have more self-confidence? There’s a difference between confidence and self-confidence.
Confidence comes from experience. If we’ve done something well before, when we do that thing again, we’ll likely have confidence that we can do it. The thought might be, “I’ve done this before and I can do it this time.”
Self-confidence comes from within. Even if we haven’t done something before, our thoughts about ourselves and our abilities can create self-confidence that we can figure something out. Or if we can’t figure it out, we’ll see it as a learning process, and we won’t beat ourselves up for that.
Self-confidence comes from having our own back and what we’ll tell ourselves when something doesn’t go the way we thought it would. The thought might be, “I tried my best, I learned what didn’t work, and I’ll try it again to see what might work differently. I know I can figure it out.”
Confidence and self-confidence are feelings. Our thoughts create our feelings. So if we want to feel confident and self-confident, we’ll need to think thoughts that create those feelings.
Many of us struggle with self-confidence because we’re used to telling ourselves mean and critical things when we think we’ve “messed up” somehow. Thoughts like:
- “I’m just not good enough for this.”
- “There must be something wrong with me.”
- “Nothing ever goes the way I want it to, so why keep trying?”
- “This is too hard for me.”
- “They think I’m incapable.”
Those thoughts will create a feeling of disappointment, self-doubt, discouragement, or defeat. Are those feelings close to the confidence or self-confidence we want to feel? No. So let’s try different thoughts. Thoughts like:
- “I’m figuring this out and I can keep trying.”
- “I’m learning what works and what doesn’t.”
- “It didn’t go the way I wanted it to this time, but let’s see if this other way works . . .”
- “This is hard and I can do hard things.”
- “I’m as capable as I need to be.”
- “I’m deciding to believe in myself no matter what.”
When we become aware of the thoughts we think about ourselves, we can choose them on purpose. We can choose thoughts that serve us, that are kinder to ourselves than the ones we might be used to thinking.
Your turn: Are you aware of the thoughts you think about yourself? What thoughts about yourself serve you? Which ones don’t? What are some slightly kinder thoughts you could choose instead? What are some much kinder–and still believable thoughts–you can choose instead?
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