How Confident do you Seem to Others?
Your level of self-confidence can show in many ways: your behavior, your body language, how you speak, what you say, and so on. Look at the following comparisons of common confident behavior with behavior associated with low self-confidence. Which thoughts or actions do you recognize in yourself and people around you?
Confident Behavior | Behavior Associated With low Self-Confidence |
---|---|
Doing what you believe to be right, even if others mock or criticize you for it. | Governing your behavior based on what other people think. |
Being willing to take risks and go the extra mile to achieve better things. | Staying in your comfort zone, fearing failure, and so avoid taking risks. |
Admitting your mistakes, and learning from them. | Working hard to cover up mistakes and hoping that you can fix the problem before anyone notices. |
Waiting for others to congratulate you on your accomplishments. | Extolling your own virtues as often as possible to as many people as possible. |
Accepting compliments graciously. “Thanks, I really worked hard on that prospectus. I’m pleased you recognize my efforts.” | Dismissing compliments offhandedly. “Oh that prospectus was nothing really, anyone could have done it.” |
As you can see from these examples, low self-confidence can be self-destructive, and it often manifests itself as negativity. Confident people are generally more positive – they believe in themselves and their abilities, and they also believe in living life to the full.
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