By Timon Clip
“Don’t
talk to her, you are not good enough” The ‘encouraging’ thought welled up in my
mind.
I was
looking at my crush during recess. I thought of approaching her. My internal
advisor advised against, and I listened. ‘Lucky….’
My mind
had played a defensive script. I had more of these internal dialogues: ‘Just
hang low, don’t attract too much attention.’ ‘I am just the quiet guy’ ‘Why are
they looking at me like I am a weirdo?’
These
self-deprecating thoughts dictated my mind. Somehow I thought I was a loser.
So
that’s how I acted.
I
didn’t dare do anything beyond my (perceived) capacities or status. I couldn’t
even stand up for myself. Every time my bullies threw me in the garbage, I
poorly objected.
After
an arduous high school journey, college finally arrived.
I vowed
to make a fresh start. This time I would be popular! So I impulsively joined a
fraternity to compensate for my anxiety. Then I would be cool! Right?
Nope, I
just started acting like a Fish.
For a
long time I mistook my misplaced arrogance, and that of my pledge brothers, for
real confidence. I thought we were cool guys. But it was all vain status play.
I was still being pushed around. By peers and my inner critic. To feel good I
indulged in the theatre of cockiness – putting other people down to feel good.
Not my proudest moments…
Strange
how you act so counter-productive when feeling insecure.
After I
was left heartbroken by my girlfriend, I hit emotional rock bottom. Something
snapped.
What
the fuck had I been doing? I could not go through life from misery to misery.
Faking who I was, to have some intermittent highlight of joy. My circumstances
should allow me to feel confident? Why wasn’t I ever feeling that way?
It was
due time to get my shit together.
Two
years later one of my (truly) best friend sits next to me. We are both a bit
drunk and bantering away. He suddenly proclaims “You know most of your douchy
frat brothers look up to you.” “Why?” I ask astounded. “Because you are always
relaxed and confident. You are not swayed by what other people say or think
about you.” “What? Are you kidding me? But I am just some nerdy guy?”
Only
then it dawned on me.
I
wasn’t a little pushover anymore. Somehow had I become confident. Besides I
wasn’t acting like a dick anymore. Instead I was helping people because of my
confidence. How did that happen?
Was I
richer? Nope! Better looking? Definitely not. More intelligent? Me no thinksie!
Somewhere
along the way I had discarded my misguided programming. Replacing it with
constructive thinking patterns.
When I
reached my low point years back. I vowed to improve myself. Immersing myself in
motivational speeches and devouring self-help books. I knew that the positive
words would rub off on my conscious and subconscious.
I
started applying advices and mindsets. Using a growth mindset and most of all –
I started taking action!
I am
convinced anyone can grow to become confident. You too can gain mature and
sustainable self-confidence. But it does mean a mental shift from the
conventional.
Are you
up to the challenge? Sure you are!
Time to
take control.
Time to
discard a life of limiting thoughts. Thoughts induced by fraudulent
advertising, faulty upbringing and fake peers. Embrace the right way of
thinking to be confident.
Let me
introduce you to the basic confident mental models that helped me. With them I
grew to someone I am proud of. Rethink yourself and your place in the world.
I give
this advice because the world would be much better if we all were more
confident. We would stop mitigating our anxieties and insecurities through
destructive behavior. Instead you could use that confidence to support
yourself, friends and strangers.
Let’s get started: 10 Essential Principles To Be
Unbelievably Confident
#1 – Be honest about your life and
accept who you are
Listen up,
maggots. You are not special. You are not a beautiful or unique snowflake.
You’re the same decaying organic matter as everything else. – Tyler Durden
Let’s
start from scratch.
Be
brutally honest about where you are in life. Know it, feel it! Be honest about
it to yourself and others. Stop denying and hiding from truths. What you deny,
you can’t change.
Hard to
grasp? Sit down and write it out.
I am a
28 year old guy in a shit job, wanting to travel the world. But can’t find the
guts to cut some ties.
Your
turn! The harder it is, the more you need to confront yourself.
Secondly
– accept who you are.
You
have strengths and weaknesses. And hey, you can improve them. But not until you
embrace who you are. Accept yourself as you are right now, with all your flaws
and shortcomings. Find contentment in it. Because there is simply no other
reality.
Through
this utter acceptance you can you grow.
#2 Define your own values and
framework
To grow
confident you need to stop chasing illusions. Stop comparing yourself to what
others demand of you. Or worse, what you think they expect from you.
Start
by defining your own values. What is important to you? Why is it important? Start
acting by these values.
Make a
thorough analysis when defining your values. Make it profound.
Ask
yourself: What implies my culture? And why? Do I agree? What did my parents
teach me? Do I agree? And why? And so on. Get to the bottom of your thoughts
and feelings.
Through
reading, discussing and reflecting you can develop your set of standards and
values. Use your own instinct, feelings and reasoning!
Recognize
influence from group dynamics. So you won’t blindly follow the herd. Thinking
for yourself means creating or choosing your own path in life.
Explore
many sources to hone your thought and values. Read books and blogs. Have
discussions and conversations. But always be critical and keep your wit.
Confident
men and women define others by their standards. Not themselves by other
people’s standards.
Create
and follow your own moral compass.
#3 Go from outer reference to
inner reference
There
is definite proof that social media makes people feel bad. Why has he so many
likes? Why is she going to cool parties etc.?
You
might display similar behavior in the analog world. Why is he richer? Happier?
Or more successful?
Strange
how we make these unfair comparisons. We take a look at appearances and then
compare it to how we feel inside.
We
compare our inner-self, to the highly curated image of other people’s outer
self.
A good
recipe for misery.
Stop
this unfair equation. Instead focus on yourself. To develop, think about how
you make progress compared to your old self. Did I do better than the me of a
month ago? Or a year ago? Did you make progress? That is success!
Progress
of self is important for confidence.
And who
is responsible for this confidence?
Who is
responsible for success? And who for your failures? Where do you think control
lies?
Confident
people think it lies within themselves. They have cultivated an inner locus of
control.
This
means taking responsibility for your actions and results. You think you are
responsible for how you feel and what you think.
Compare
this to blaming everything on external actors. Like your boss, parents, the
weather, or divine will. If you don’t think YOU are responsible, you won’t be
inclined to improve.
Making
yourself responsible will.
Granted,
some things definitely are out of your control. But you are responsible for
your reactions to these events.
#4 Adapt a growth mind-set
As
mentioned, developing and confidence go hand in hand. To stand still is to go
backwards.
A fatal
flaw people are susceptible to, is thinking their skills and character are set
in stone. This deterministic mindset is incompatible with progress. It’s a limiting
self-fulfilling prophecy.
If this
is you, start adopting a growth mindset instead.
Know
you can improve any skill! Know you can develop your character!
As long
as you are alive, your body and mind can adapt to new challenges. Never think
you can’t grow any further.
Furthermore,
a healthy growth mindset acknowledges failure.
There
is a lot of sketching before you draw a Mona Lisa. Redefine failure not as
something stupid or dumb only for losers. But define it as a part of the
learning process.
Failures
will occur. Anticipate the impact and plan for getting back up!
Every
failure is another lesson learned.
#5 Stop seeking validation and
acceptance from others
As a
person led by inner values you won’t need attention, validation and acceptance
of others.
You
might get it. You might even enjoy it.
But you
don’t need it!
Stop
actively seeking and craving it. Stop pleasing people to get it.
You can
be nice to people! Of course! But it should come from a position of strength
and compassion. Not from seeking acceptance and attention. Your own acceptance
and moral integrity are the most important. Others can follow if they want.
If you
condone behavior opposite to your values, or give away status to be accepted.
You act without integrity. Losing confidence in the process.
Instead,
stand by your values!
#6 Cultivate a Bias for the
Positive
People have this amazing power to decide how they feel
about events. A small pause between stimuli and reaction. As mentioned by Victor
Frankl.
Cultivate
this little pause. And use it to choose
a more positive reaction.
Guide
your responses away from annoyance, anger or fear. Go instead for interest, gratefulness
or excitement.
You can
actively rephrase your thought patterns. Train different ways of thinking and
speaking.
Examples
of redefining your view on the world are:
– Think in solutions instead of problems
– Reflect on past achievements instead of
past transgressions.
– Enjoy the process instead of only seeing
the goal.
– Never let a good crisis go to waste
– Focus on what you want instead of what you
avoid
Of
course there will always be old negative thinking patterns. Try using them as
little as possible and actively immerse your mind with positivity.
Read
uplifting books. Use mantra’s to rewire your brain. Let go of toxic people and
environments and embrace uplifting ones.
All
little steps to be more optimistic and confident.
“Sow
a thought and you reap an action; sow an act and you reap a habit; sow a habit
and you reap a character; sow a character and you reap a destiny.” – Frank
Outlaw
#7 Lose self-limiting beliefs
When we
grow up, we create models of the world.
We
construct beliefs that explain what happens around us. X happens because of Y.
End of story.
These
beliefs can be deeply ingrained in our thinking.
But, a
lot of beliefs are flawed. They limit your progress and possibilities. They
prevent you from action and enjoying life.
Grow
beyond these scripts.
First
recognize them. When you think “I can’t do X because of Y.” Or anything
similar, be alert!
Analyze
whether that statement is true. And why. Reason even furthers. ‘Why do I think
that?’ ‘Are not other people doing the same thing?’ Find prove that it is
possible, contradicting your initial limiting belief.
Then
redefine your scripts. Because these imposed scripts will limit you. Instead of
thinking I can’t do this. Think I can do X despite Y.
This is
a hard and elusive problem – but it can be countered!
#8
Forgive yourself and others
We all
fuck up in life.
It’s a
good idea to remind yourself everyday of your mistakes. And make yourself feel
very miserable.
No of
course not!!
You
should learn from your mistakes. Absolutely. But wallowing in negative feelings
won’t help. There is little you can change about past events. It has happened.
Instead:
Own up to it, fix the problem if you can, forgive yourself, learn and move on.
Don’t waste time and energy feeling bummed out about it.
Take
the time to forgive yourself for mistakes.
Also –
stop holding grudges. It is no good to keep being mad or grieved at others for
their mistakes. Let go of it, you’ll release yourself from emotional poison.
Forgiveness
allows you to focus on the now and the future instead of dwelling in the past.
#9 Be Self-Reliant
Part of
being confident is you know everything will be all right. Especially when shit
hits the fan.
Got
dumped? Got laid off? Dust yourself off, and tell yourself it will be all
right.
No
spiraling down in destructive self-pity. No bouts of whining and comfort
seeking from friends and family.
Of
course you can mourn. You can be sad or melancholic. It is not about being
happy and joyful all the time. We all experience a wide range of emotion.
Important emotions that are part of the human experience.
But
inside, you know you the bad times will pass.
So you
will tell yourself.
You
will feel good and grow stronger in the future.
#10 Don’t take yourself too
seriously
We are
all insignificant bags of meat and bones. Trying to make meaning of a
collection of random events called life.
People
seeking power, fame and money are just looking for that bliss they had as a
child. When life wasn’t that hard, when we weren’t putting so much pressure on
ourselves.
Were
you taking things seriously back then? I guess not right. Is there any reason
to be serious about everything now? In a world filled with randomness? No
reason at all.
Go with
the flow and laugh about your own mistakes, successes and theatrics!
The
world’s a stage and we are best in fooling ourselves with our performances!
Choose the role you want and enjoy it. Knowing fully well, it is all a game if
you just choose to play and have fun.
Do
not take life too seriously. You will never get out of it alive. –Elbert Hubbard
Becoming
confident comes at a price.
Change.
A
change of heart and mind. Believe me, it is well worth it. If you succeed, you
will still have ups and down in life. But also a steady level contentment. An
anchor of stability that keeps you going without all too much problems.
So how
can you possible make this shift? Small consistent steps. Here are some action
to get started:
Define
your own values
Sit
down and reflect, evaluate and define what is important to you
Reflect
and refine your values over your life
Live
true to them
Start a
meditation practice to gain insight and control over your mind
Stop
watching social media compulsively
Read
positive, growth focused books, blogs and movies
Start
slow, you will get there step by step. Start taking control and responsibility
for your mind.
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