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Appreciate Your Efforts And Raise Your Self-Confidence Sky High!
Would you like to be confident in the things you do? Most people
would. The problem is that many people aren't sure how. They
think confidence is some mystical trait that some people are
born with and others aren't. Actually, being confident in
yourself and your ability to achieve your goals is a skill that
can be learned.
Imagine that you have been thinking about making a change in
your life for quite some time now. But it seems that something
always stopped you from taking action. Now the time seems right
and you are ready to take those first steps to make your dream a
reality. Congratulations for reaching this point! Along the way,
you will certainly experience many victories. Yet there will
also be challenges. To keep yourself going, you are going to
need lots of support from one very important person: You! You
need to feel confident that you can have the success you want.
While there is no one set definition for confidence, on the
whole it means being able to trust yourself. This means that
when you set a goal for yourself, you trust yourself to make a
plan, take charge of your actions, evaluate your actions,
appreciate your efforts and successes, provide supportive
self-talk, and do whatever you can to prove to yourself that you
can indeed influence outcomes.
One way to strengthen your confidence is to appreciate your
efforts and successes along each step of the way. To balance the
scale of triumphs and challenges, you need to recognize and feel
good about all the small steps you take each day, and the
efforts you put forth toward achieving your goal. Building on
every little victory acts like fuel to your confidence.
Why Appreciating
Effort is Critical
For many, the journey toward reaching the overall goal is often
a long road. It is frequently so full of experiences,
challenges, obstacles, that we often don't notice the gradual
change that is occurring. We don't recognize the progress we
have made. If you have not taken the time to appreciate your
efforts and to write down each little success, your next
obstacle may just stop you in your tracks. You will loose
motivation and give up. This happens not because the obstacle is
bigger than you are, but because you start to believe that you
can't effect change in your world. Without any proof of the
positive steps you have already taken, you falsely believe
yourself to be helpless or hopeless to get past your sticking
point. Why bother continuing forward if it is not going to make
a difference anyhow?
The Harm of
Dismissing Success
One sure fire way of killing your own confidence is to dismiss
your success. Imagine that you are in the habit of using food to
soothe your emotions and feel better. You make a plan to stop
your emotional eating and begin to take action. Through much
effort and determination, you manage to deal with your emotions
in new, self-supporting ways. For three entire days, you use
alternate strategies to bring yourself back into a state of
emotional balance. However, on that fourth day, you end up
reverting to your old habits of eating to numb out and eating to
feel better. What are you most likely to do with this situation?
- Do you dismiss those three days as proof that since they did
not last, you are not good enough to have what you want - and
now you fall into feeling helplessness or hopelessness?
- Do you use those three days and the subsequent relapse as an
occasion to self-condemn and shame yourself? How stupid of you
for trying. Better not to have tried at all then to have tried
and failed?
-Do you use your three days of success to boost your confidence?
If you can make it three days on your new plan, then you can
make it three and half days next time. Do you use the relapse to
evaluate what happened and adjust your plan?
When Do You Get to
Feel Successful?
One day, I decided I wanted to increase the amount of water I
was drinking each day. I thought things through and concluded
that the best way to achieve success would be to drink one
bottle of water each morning as I was in the bathroom preparing
for my day. After a few weeks had gone by, I pondered my goal. I
realized that almost every morning I had drank one full bottle
of water. Had achieved success with my goal? How long must I
drink a daily morning bottle of water before I could call myself
successful?
Contemplating, I became aware of my own particularly nasty
pattern. I had a habit of setting goals, making them happen, but
never acknowledging success along the way. Like many people, I
had no mental criteria established for when I could call myself
successful. There was no endpoint of, "How do I know I've
achieved my goal." Since there was no endpoint, I didn't feel
good during the many efforts and achievements along the way, and
I certainly didn't feel good at the end of the goal. I was
running my own life story of not being good enough for myself,
and having to earn my own love but never succeeding.
I sat there amazed at my own self-realization. I asked, "How
long must I maintain a behavior before I can call myself
successful?" The answer came immediately: "The very first time
the behavior is achieved, you are successful." Wow! This about
blew me away. I successfully achieved my goal the first day I
followed through with my intention. No wonder I never felt full
or 'enough'. I was completely failing to recognize, acknowledge,
or celebrate my strengths, efforts, and my achievements.
Many of the people I work with also have no internal criteria
established for knowing when they are successful. They say when
they lose 40 pounds, then they will be successful and confident.
Or, when they stop binge eating, then they will be happy. But
what happens when they lose those forty pounds or stop binging
for several days? Their success does not count as a solid
success. Eventually a few pounds creep back on or a relapse in
binge behavior occurs. Not surprisingly, this gets acknowledged!
Suddenly there is lots of negative self-talk, huge emotion, and
beastly feelings of self-reproach. Now there is evidence that
success can not be achieved.
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Dr. Annette Colby, RD can
help you take the pain out of life, turn difficult
emotions into joy, release stress, end emotional eating,
and move beyond depression into an extraordinary
life! Annette is the author of
Your Highest Potential
and has the unique ability to show you how to spark an
amazing relationship with your life! Visit
http://www.LovingMiracles.com
to access hundreds of content filled articles and sign
up for a Free subscription to Loving Miracles!
newsletter. Article
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