How can I become more self confident?
earthwalker3
on
May 15, 2015
...read more
First of all, great question! :) Second of all, it takes time and a lot of effort. You will have days where you'll feel really down but with perseverance, you will also have many other days where you will finally realise how worthy you are! And that feeling will never equate to the low ones! :) A few tips I have learnt is by trying your best to see the positive in everyone. Compliment random people, including your friends and family of course, that you see (in your head if actually complimenting them is a bit of a large step) and take a simple note of something you like about them e.g the way they walk, their hair, their smile, how amazing those shoes make their calves look. Haha! Try and see the beauty in everyone and eventually you will realise that you also a part of 'everyone'. You are also beautiful! Look in the mirror and say something that you like about yourself each day. One thing a day is fine! They will all build up until you'll practically have nothing you dislike about yourself! However, building self confidence is also about accepting your flaws too. Perfection doesn't exist so when we strive to love ourselves, feel confident in ourselves, being happy rather than changing ourselves, we will learn to be a lot happier with our bodies. Not comparing yourself to others is also a very critical part. When we find someone attractive/good looking, our thoughts can often derail from 'wow! they look great! You go, pal!' to 'That person looks good....I don't have that thing that they have. They're so much better than me, I am not beautiful' or somewhere along those lines. Sound familiar? It's something we're all known for doing and it's a thought process that we must break. Also, I think we just get very used to our appearances, especially our features, so we sometimes take for granted just how special and unique we are. You are your own person and you have a whole lifetime of experiences to build on yourself to master self love. Life is too short to not fall in love with yourself and I have no doubt that you'll feel a lot more confident in time :) Please don't hesitate to message me if you'd like to discuss this further! Take care :)
aparnakher
on
Mar 18, 2015
...read more
Falling in love with oneself is the first and the most important thing to be self-confident according to me. We need to accept that we aren't perfect beings but we are just right the way we are. We need to accept our flaws and appreciate our strengths because they are a part of this huge complex system called *us*. Once we do that, self-confidence will be boosted considerably. :)
DevilDog1775
on
Jan 25, 2016
...read more
You just do it. You can read all the advice tips you want but it all comes down to you. Just do it.
kindRose56
on
Feb 28, 2017
...read more
There are so many ways to learn to be confident. For years I was shy and never happy with myself. Recently I have learned that there are things that I just can't control and to just accept them and move on. I also tried new things and met new people. I have mad so many new friends and new activities I enjoy. I am so much more confident about myself and having wonderful people around me helps.
Jimmerr
on
Feb 23, 2015
...read more
Go out more with friends! That way, you will be able to build confidence and build for a future that someday will become your reality.
Musetta
on
Apr 16, 2015
...read more
My answer would be "fake it until you make it". Even if you don't feel so great, keep your head up and smile every time you look into a mirror. Just pretend to love yourself until you actually do and you won't even notice how much more confident you've become.
tranquilLion61
on
Apr 25, 2015
...read more
In order to be self confident you first need to know yourself. Find out which personality you have, your temperament, you're potential and then accept it.
AnnieWizz
on
May 27, 2015
...read more
Was once very unconfident and this has been an ongoing journey for me. Whilst everyone is different, I decided to go back too school and also to try to help others wherever I could. Also wherever possible I surround myself with honest and positive people. Most importantly I am recognising that whilst I am not always perfect, I am still worth loving.
Jagannathadasa
on
Jul 21, 2015
...read more
Self-confidence means understanding that you deserve as much love and respect as everyone else. Ideally our family helps us understand this from our very childhood; however, even if we suffer from low self-confidence, it can still be inculcated, although it will take focus and support. My purpose is to give some principles and paradigms of what that effort will look like. If encouragement shines through, and obstacles are made visible, then the answer will be successful and satisfying to my heart.
Let's first distinguish what self-confidence is not; It is not confidence.
By confidence, I mean an attitude generated by someone who has practiced a skill or studied a field of knowledge in such a way that they can do or explain it without fear of embarrassment, and with ambition to show it off. A truly self-confident person may be put into situations which demand them to try out unfamiliar skills or unknown ideas. He or she will naturally feel some insecurity if required to perform or explain those things. Then again, one may be highly trained in a field of knowledge or cultivate staggering technical ability precisely to make up for lack of self-confidence. In either case, no amount of knowledge or skills will substitute for self-value.
Now, one may say, "Well knowledge and skills are important, too!" Indeed they are, yet the attitude of a self-confident person is only minorly affected by possession or lack of them because they know they are "okay", either way. Not so for someone without self-confidence! Their sense of personal value rests on how "good" they think they are at something, or how they believe they're evaluated by others. This locks them into harmful and possibly dangerous emotional dependencies. The two kinds of harm caused by this self-abnegation will be touched on at the end of the answer.
Now, having hopefully distinguished actual self-confidence which is inherent and universal, from confidence in particular skills or knowledge, I'll share from my personal experience how to develop the genuine article, not having absorbed it by childhood.
Growing up largely alone, I felt a lack of care. This was exacerbated by being teased for becoming overweight by fellow school kids. I learned how to win praise by doing art, poetry, scholarship, music and so on, but no matter how, or in which field I excelled, I felt sad or angry because of competing against an inner voice of shame and blame which echoed from those harsh words of my peers. Unfortunately, I didn't realize it at the time, and by my late teens, I turned to drugs, and well... that didn't help matters.
Only after college, when a friend was there for me regardless of my self-hatred, resentment, fear and showing-off, did I finally learn to value someone personally, regardless of their knowledge or skill sets. His self-confidence and his confidence in my self-worth rubbed off. Now I practice it, daily.
Some key paradigms:
"I deserve as much love as the next person; not more, not less."
"Personal worth is an inalienable right of existence, and comes with the responsibility to extend that same respect to others."
A final note: Confusing self-confidence with confidence in a particular knowledge domain, or skill set is harmful in the following ways:
1. To yourself, especially if you blame yourself for feeling inadequate. (Neurosis)
2. To others, especially if you blame other people or situations for feeling inadequate. (Character Disorder)
These manifest when you
a. Can’t master a skill you want,
b. Master a skill but it doesn't satisfy you as you hoped it would,
or (most painfully)
c. When you master a skill, but you lose it.
Legitimate self-confidence, is essential to avoid this needless pain or heal it, and gives the interminable life-strength to experience our shared challenges, progressively together.
Anonymous
on
Aug 3, 2015
...read more
One thing I did to become more self-confident, is to write down one good thing about myself each night. It can be something like "I liked the way my hair looked today," or "I'm proud of the way I handled this tough situation today."
How can I be more cnfident in myself?
24 Answers
Is it normal to suddenly become very self aware when someone compliments your appearance?
22 Answers
How can I improve my self esteem?
19 Answers
Why do i feel like everyone secretly dislikes me?
18 Answers
Why do I constantly feel as though I am not good enough?
18 Answers
When do you feel Self-Confident?
16 Answers