Here is very good article on confidence.
Confidence - You Only Sell You by Denis Waitley
Reproduced with permission from Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine. To subscribe to Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine, go to www.deniswaitley.com or send an email with Join in the subject to subscribe@deniswaitley.com Copyright © 2005 Denis Waitley International. All rights reserved worldwide.
Confidence - You Only Sell You by Denis Waitley
In my opinion, there is nothing more important
than your belief in your own potential for success and happiness,
regardless of your age, gender, ethnicity, looks, education or
background. The truth is, every day "You only sell you. You don’t
sell products or a business concept. You sell the value of the
person offering the products and services. The decision of the
buyer
is based on the value of the seller. Just as products are branded
as
"the best", "cheap", "ineffective", "trustworthy" or "unreliable",
so, too, are individuals branded by others as "winners" or
"also-rans." Who you are shots so loudly, that people either can’t
hear, don’t want to hear, or listen carefully to what you are
saying. Everybody loves a winner, and we all want to buy from
winners who pass their own value on to us.
Self-confidence isn’t something you were born
with. It’s something you develop. Many of us were
cultivated like weeds as children. We played inferior roles to the adults around us, who frequently reminded us of our faults and shortcomings more than our successes and abilities.
cultivated like weeds as children. We played inferior roles to the adults around us, who frequently reminded us of our faults and shortcomings more than our successes and abilities.
If you had that type of childhood, as I did,
you face a special challenge in building up your self-confidence as
an adult. Here are some basic points to remember about yourself:
1. Realize that the most important opinion about you is the one that
you hold. Ultimately, nobody else is responsible for your life but
you. Nobody else is accountable for your actions but you. Therefore,
nobody’s opinion about you is more important than yours.
2. Recognize that the most important
conversations are the ones you have with yourself. Whether or
not you are aware of it, you have a running conversation with
yourself from the time you get up to the time you go to sleep.
Your thoughts and ideas are "you talking to you." Have daily
conversations with yourself that are supportive and reinforcing.
We know the value of talking to people who praise us, reward us,
recognize us, are happy to see us, and let us know they
genuinely enjoy talking with us. Talk to yourself with those
same qualities – silently as well as audibly.
3.
Develop a strong system of internal
values. Weigh what you hold to be true, good and lasting. Write
down some of your values for periodic review. Read material that
reinforces what you hold to be significant in life. Know what
you believe and why you believe it. At times, have discussions –
even debates – with yourself Draw conclusions about life.
Think about deeper issues. Your values will greatly affect how
you relate to others. The stronger your values are, the greater
the impact. If you are lacking in internal values, you will tend
to draw from and even use other people to try to mimic their
behaviors, if only superficially. Instead, seek to become a
model, one who can help and give strength to others.
4. Don’t reinforce your failures. Failure is
a detour, not a dead-end street. Failure is a temporary setback,
not a residence. Failure is a learning experience, not a
person. Like success, failure is a growth process, not a
status. Don’t wallow in your mistakes. Correct them and move
forward.
5. Don’t demand perfection of yourself. An A
is usually awarded to the person who scores 90 percent or
better, and sometimes the score doesn’t need to be that high.
Professional basketball players only make half their shots.
Professional quarterback complete only half their passes, and
professional baseball players reach first base less than 40
percent of the time, and that includes walks. And we all know
what our averages are in picking stocks to invest in that are
always going up. That would be never! Give your best effort
every day and keep ratcheting forward. Perfection is not only
totally unrealistic to expect and virtually impossible to
achieve, but it greatly deters your ability to move forward. The
person who is constantly looking over his or her shoulder at
what might have been done better, can’t possibly be focused on
the future. Drive with your eyes ahead; don’t drive by
concentrating on the rearview mirror.
6. Give each job or task your best effort.
Countless individuals say, when confronted with a chore, "I’m too
good to be doing this." They have contempt for their current
situation and position, and get discouraged easily. Success is an
accumulation of what you do in the minutes of each day. No task is
too unworthy to do well. There are no small parts – only small
actors.
7. View the big picture of life. Step back
from the landscape of your life today and take a long walk, ride
a bike, or just sit silently, observing the wonder and abundance
of God’s creation in nature. You are a part of a much bigger
whole. Listen to the subtle rhythms of your environment.
Recognize that you have rhythms and cycles of change in your
life. Relax and open up to the vast creative and interrelated
world around you.
To develop
confidence, you must see yourself ultimately as a unique part of
creation. You must recognize, with pleasure, that nobody else is
just like you. No one else has exactly your temperament, history or
experiences. No one else has your footprints, your finger prints,
your voice print or your genetic code. No one else has precisely
your set of talents, capabilities and skills. You are one of a kind.
The value is there. It just needs to be dusted off and polished.
Reproduced with permission from Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine. To subscribe to Denis Waitley's Weekly Ezine, go to www.deniswaitley.com or send an email with Join in the subject to subscribe@deniswaitley.com Copyright © 2005 Denis Waitley International. All rights reserved worldwide.
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