The fastest way to kill self-confidence

I have learnt painfully, well I say learnt, like some smug person, I still do this, so perhaps the learning is not complete!! I am trying to learn not to say the things I’m going to do and then not do them.

It is better to do absolutely nothing than to say ‘im going to do x’ and ‘I’m going to do y’ and so on and not do them. Every single time you say you are going to do something and then don’t it does two things.

Firstly, inside us it reaffirms our thoughts on not being a doer and putting things off, it becomes self-fulfilling, and we start to lose confidence.

The second thing is, and we are not always immediately aware, we lose credibility with others. Sooner or later, that has an impact and that then creates a public feeling of being unreliable or not trusted to get things done. This kills self-confidence massively.

So, what’s the answer? Well, it would seem simple, just do the things you say you are going to do. Job done.

Well, it isn’t that simple, firstly I am bad at saying ‘no’ to things and I get easily distracted by shiny new things, so I jump in and say ‘I’ll do that’. Also, we want to be involved and not left out so we say ‘yes’ or we do not want to offend so we say ‘yes’. So I become overloaded with things and it is then not possible to do them all.

Often, that leads to hiding in my shell and the net result is I achieve nothing, trapped like a rabbit in the headlights, knowing I have committed to others.

I think the answer is to focus, focus on one thing, a thing that we are good at and then get good, well get great, at doing that one thing. Learn to commit and not to overstate what you are going to do. It is also the painful, initially, hard work of building a habit of showing up. But I have learnt I have to make it easy to show up, if the task is too risky, too out of the comfort zone, to big, it won’t happen. Learn to say ‘no’ and that is easier if we are only going to do one thing.

Small steps and learning to say no, coupled with focusing on the one thing you are really great at. I thought for a long time that I was good at everything, wow, now I know that was a myth, it is easier to focus.

I wrote this really as a reminder to myself, as I can still lapse into ‘I can do that’ mode very easily. Stop, protect your self-confidence Philip by doing a few things and saying little rather than saying I’ll do everything and achieving none.

The biggest kick in the teeth about change

The biggest kick in the teeth about change is people, who have known you for long enough and before you changed, still react to you as if you were still that person before you learnt, adapted and changed yourself.

It’s totally understandable, and not that there ever needs to be blame, it is not their fault. You may have behaved a certain way for a long time and that is what people expect from you.

The things is, I need to be patient more patient and understanding with others when they do this to me. I need to realise that everyone rightly has their own pace of change and learning, and in fact who am I even to suggest that others need to change anyway? I am better off focusing on what I’m up to, as that’s the only thing that concerns me.

The only way to show that you have changed how you behave to others is not by words,and if you have behaved in way that you now recognise was wrong, then it is actions over time and repeating the changed behaviour long enough so that the people who matter, that we may have hurt previously can see that you have really changed.

I have previously thought, almost like buying a bunch of flowers, you can just simply make up for wrong choices of behaviour. It takes time, like everything, to demonstrate to people you are different. It means accepting having a kick in the teeth now and again, as I was the one who needed to change.

Just off now to adjust my gum shield.