si dawson

experiments in self-improvement

Category: communication

How To Be Confident

Confidence is a funny thing. It comes in two flavours. How confident other people believe you are, & how confident you feel internally. The two are related, but not necessarily linked. E.g., it’s quite common that other people see us as more confident than we may actually feel.

So how do you go about becoming more confident?

Well, there’s a bunch of physical attributes: head up, shoulders back, firm eye contact, firm handshake, steady voice. None of this is new or complicated. You can read more about it here & here.

Changing your posture does change your emotional state, so by all means do the physical stuff as well (it’ll help how you feel), but I’m going to talk about working directly on the non-physical stuff.

Let’s start with the easy side of things – how we’re perceived externally. Other than posture, how do other people assess how confident we are?

By our speech. What we say, how we say it, the words we use.

I got to thinking about this when reading Jeannette Maw’s excellent Good Vibe Blog. She was talking about wiping out wimpy words. Words that disempower us, make us sound wishy washy, limit us.

These are all words & phrases that will make us seems significantly less confident than we may actually be.

lion.jpg
pic by nnn27

What are some examples?

  • Hopefully
  • Probably
  • Should
  • I suppose

So, my hypothesis is, if we stop using these kinds of words, we’ll appear (externally) more confident.

Well, that sounds worth doing, but wait up a second. Before we rush into this, let’s think a little.

Who do we talk to the most, out of all of the people in our lives?

Ourselves, of course.

For every time we say something out loud that makes us sound insecure, we’re going to be saying the exact same thing to ourselves dozens if not hundreds of times.

Removing these words from our vocab will not only make us more confident to others, but will also make us notably more confident internally, when talking to ourselves.

As within, so without – maybe it’s not quite so much of a surprise after all.

Of course, a healthy goal is to remove that nagging inner voice entirely (through meditation, releasing etc), but until we reach that noble pinnacle of enlightenment & inner peace, we still have to contend with our ego. Why not push things in our favour in the meantime?

What’s a good way of removing (or at the very least drastically minimising) specific words & phrases from our vocabulary? Well, the tool I’ve found best for this task is EFT. It’s super simple to use and ridiculously quick.

If you haven’t used EFT before, I’ve put a quick intro up here. The basic gist is to tap (just like tapping a keyboard, but with a coupla fingers at once) on various points around the body, while thinking or saying whatever-it-is you want to fix. The tapping loosens up energy blocks in the body, your energy starts flowing properly again and you automatically heal (since our natural state is to be 100% healthy).

So how to remove a word from your vocab? Just tap the karate chop point (side of hand) while saying something like “Even though I say ‘hopefully’ I love & accept myself”, or “Even though I use the phrase ‘I guess’ I love & accept myself.” Really, the words don’t matter too much, just say whatever pops in your head & feels right for you. Once you’ve said that a few times while tapping your karate chop point, work your way around the points on the body (pic here), saying “I say ‘hopefully” or “I use the word ‘hopefully'” etc & tapping each point 5-10 times.

Once you’ve done a couple of full rounds, & if you want to be really thorough, you can do a couple more rounds, saying something like “I still say ‘hopefully’.” This will clear out any remants that might be left over.

It really is that simple. Total time? 2-3 minutes a word, if that.

fire.jpg
pic by pixietart

Here’s the list I cleared out yesterday:

  • hopefully
  • probably
  • should
  • try
  • pretty sure
  • I’ll figure it out
  • doubt
  • can’t
  • want (since want is synonymous with ‘lack’, why not clear that too?)
  • I guess
  • I suppose
  • I need to
  • I’m not sure
  • I don’t think
  • kinda

Of course, everyone uses different words & phrases, so your own list will likely be quite different, but these might help you get started. Just see what resonates for you.

The funny thing is, as you start to clear them out, other commonly used limiting phrases will start to become more obvious & bubble to the surface. I also felt the way I was thinking changing. Sounds insane but it’s true. I could feel myself using different phrasing internally, & as I did, my body became more sure of itself. Not quite sure (ha! I’ll add that to my list) how that works, but a definite example of the mind/body connection at play.

The net result of all this mucking about? More confident thought patterns, more confident speech & a significantly more confident persona. Total time taken? A little over half an hour.

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    Stop Whining, Start Winning

    How often do you complain?

    No, I don’t mean half hour long soliloquies at the barista because your coffee is cold, I mean just everyday complaints.

    Anytime you verbally express a negative thought, that’s a complaint.

    Why do we do this? Habit, typically. Sometimes boredom, But deeper than that – oftentimes it’s a social thing (f***mylife is an example) – it’s socially encouraged to bond over misery stories. To sympathise, express empathy & so on. Sometimes it’s a way of adjusting social hierarchies – I’m your superior, but if I express misery that makes us more equal, & thus you more comfortable. If I feel inferior, complaining about you might (in theory) make me feel better about myself by diminishing you somehow. Many entire cultures have whinging as a core attribute (England, I’m looking at you).

    With all those people doing it, what’s the big deal? I mean, really?

    Fundamentally, it damages us.

    Talking about something gives it our attention, our energy. Gives it power.

    moony_moon.jpg
    Focus on the moon, not the clutter of trees.

    Basically, whining makes you feel shitty.

    If you believe in the law of attraction, then the more you talk about something, the more you’re going to attract more of that thing. Want a miserable day tomorrow? Spend a bunch of time talking about how miserable today was.

    If you think LOA is a bunch of hokum, well think about it this way – why the hell are you wasting you time, energy & attention focussing on something you don’t like? How on earth is that making you any happier? Any more productive? Sorting the problem out, or improving your life? It’s not.

    Sure, undesirable things happen. So what? What really matters is how we react to them. Martin Seligman in Learned Optimism discovered that the key difference between success & failure in life is how we treat setbacks. Fundamentally, we do better, get luckier & have more success the less energy we give to these negative events. Pessimists talk a lot about setbacks. Optimists dismiss them. This is eloquently summed up by Sylvester Stallone who likes to dismiss negative situations with “They probably just ate some bad clams.”

    As Viktor Frankl said, (paraphrased) the only real freedom we have is the freedom to choose how we react to any event.

    The less attention you give negative events (other than the minimum necessary to physically deal with them, of course), the more of your time is focussed on things you actually want. Your goals. Your happiness. Feeling good.

    Whinging takes us out of that zone of joy. Out of expressing ourselves in the world. In the process, it adds nothing positive to our lives at all. The more we can reduce it, the better we feel about our lives. About our days. About how things are going for us. Why? Because how we feel about ourselves is the sum total of our thoughts. The more of those thoughts are positive, the better we feel.

    If you remember nothing else, remember this:

    Your quality of life is directly proportional to how much of the time you feel good.
    Yes, that’s incredibly obvious. You want to have a better life? Spend more of it feeling better.

    Of course, the question is – how do you increase how much you feel good? Well (& a big duh to this one) stop making yourself feel miserable so often. You may not be able to help what happens to you, but you can definitely change how much time you spending talking, thinking or focussing on these bad things around you.

    Try it for a week. Anytime you catch yourself whinging, deliberately let that thought go, & think (or better, say!) something positive instead. Or heck, if you can’t do that, just shut the hell up – that’s a great first step. See how great you start feeling, by comparison. Notice how much better things get in your life – people reacting more positively to you, opportunities arriving, things just somehow going smoother.

    We only have so many minutes each day. Make them count. Make them positive ones. It’s just a choice.

    [If you’d like to read more, my man Dhrumil has a great podcast here about why we complain, & how to help others we see complaining. Also worth checking is AComplaintFreeWorld]

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      The Importance Of Speech

      “If you propose to speak, always ask yourself, is it true, is it necessary, is it kind?”
      — Buddha

      I heard this quote the other day (thanks @tinybuddha), and it hit like a ton of bricks.

      love_in_a_bubble.jpg pic by Trove Designs

      When I was growing up, I was always told “If you haven’t got anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all”. Conceptually this is the same thing, except that it’s negatively framed and a little dictatorial in tone – I guess it’s not surprising my younger self rebelled! Still, I guess this is the point where I say “Yes Mum, you were right. Again. I love you Mum.”

      Buddha provides a pretty simple checklist. Makes it easy to remember.

      1. True? Yes/No.
      2. Necessary? Yes/No.
      3. Kind? Yes/No.

      I thought about this a bit deeper & I realised, speech is one level, but what’s behind speech?

      Thought.

      Couldn’t the same thing apply here? If you’re going to think anything, ensure it is True, Necessary & Kind.

      Of course, the vast majority of thoughts are simply self-speech – talking to or about ourselves. We’re the cruelest & least forgiving toward ourselves, so if anything this self-speech, thought, is far, far more important to consider.

      So, being the extremist that I am, I tapped those two things in – both speech & thought. Because it’s tapping IN a positive, instead of tapping OUT a negative, it’s worth having a few goes to clear out all the blocks.. but already I’m feeling my attitudes – towards those around me – and myself – softening.

      It’s a path well worth travelling, no matter how few or how those steps are taken.

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