當(dāng)我們沒自信時(shí),我們會(huì)做出錯(cuò)誤的決定。我們會(huì)在恐懼的前提下做出選擇,而不是以那些最好的東西為基礎(chǔ)。如果你缺乏自信,生活可能會(huì)過得很糟糕。Fear is the path to the dark side. Fear leads to anger, anger leads to hate, hate leads to suffering. - Yoda
Last week I did something that scared the hell out of me. I stood in front of nearly 200 financial planners and I talked to them about why financial blogs are a good thing.
I'm a confident writer. I've been doing this long enough that I know my strengths and my limitations. I've had enough feedback to understand that I'm an effective communicator - when I use the written word. I'm less confident as a speaker. I don't have time to pause to formulate my thoughts. I'm not able to edit. I'm afraid of being trapped in a corner without being able to talk my way out. Basically, I'm scared to speak.
It would be easy to simply refuse the opportunities that come my way. When somebody asks me to speak in front of a group, I could say "no". When radio and television stations call for an interview, I could say "no". But for the past two years, I've been following my own policy to say "yes" to new opportunities (so long as they don't violate my personal code of conduct).
To say "no" is to live in fear. My goal is to continually improve myself, to become better than I am today. One way to do that is to do the things that scare me, to take them on as challenges, and to learn from them - even if I fail.
The magic of thinking big
In mid-November, a local station asked me to appear on live television. "I realize it's short notice," the producer wrote, "but we'd love to have you on the show if you're available tonight."
It's one thing to say that you want to overcome your fears, but it's another thing to actually do it. Fear is real. When I was asked to appear on live television, I was frightened. I remembered my disastrous interview with a Seattle radio station in early 2007. I thought about recent taped television interviews that I had hated. I was afraid of what might happen.
But I also thought about the things that had gone right. I thought of how my speaking skills had improved over the past year. I thought about my enthusiasm for frugality and personal finance. And then I thought of the book I was a reading, a book that I had bought for $1.29 at the local thrift store.
The Magic of Thinking Big was a huge bestseller during the 1960s. Written by Dr. David Schwartz, a professor at Georgia State University, the book contains dozens of practical hints and tips (and many anecdotes) to illustrate the power of taking risks to achieve big goals. Schwartz argues that nobody will believe in you until you believe in yourself.
So when the television producer asked if I wanted to appear on his show, I thought big. "Sure," I said. "I'll do it." I acted confident, but on the inside I was frightened. What I needed were techniques to boost my confidence and to overcome my fear.
Remember that those times when you feel that your ideas aren't good enough, or people are putting down on your ideas, or you're getting fired - that these are the same ideas that you're going to be celebrated for 30 years later. You almost have to have courage. - Francis Ford Coppola, The Godfather DVD commentary track
How to build confidence and destroy fear
Without self-confidence, we have a tendency to make poor decisions. We make choices based on fear instead of what is best for us. If you lack confidence, you might fill your life with self-destructive behavior. You might work at a job you hate. You may allow yourself to get deep in debt. You may find yourself moving from one bad relationship to another. Without confidence, you don't allow yourself to pursue your dreams.
In The Magic of Thinking Big, David Schwartz argues that all confidence isdeveloped. "No one is born with confidence," he writes. "Those people you know who radiate confidence, who have conquered worry, who are at ease everywhere and all the time, acquired their confidence, every bit of it."
Confidence is built slowly, one success at a time. I've learned that in order to overcome fear, I need to employ a variety of techniques. Here are a few that I've picked over the years, and which I've used to help myself get out of debt, and to develop the courage to speak before groups or to appear on live television:
· Don't dwell on failures. Draw from the things you've done right. My talk last week was far from perfect. But if I dwell on the things I did wrong, I'll psych myself out of future opportunities. I'll be scared to say "yes" when somebody asks me to speak. Instead, I'm trying to focus on the things I did right so that I can emphasize them in future presentations.
· Rehearse a positive outcome. Before my live television appearance, I watched clips of similar interviews on the same show. (I'm not a regular television watcher, so this was new.) I arrived at the station early, so I sat in the car, closed my eyes, and imagined the interviewer asking me questions about the subject. I imagined joking with her. I imagined it as a positive experience.
· Do not procrastinate. Procrastination promotes fear. When you're afraid, thinking is your enemy. Act. Do what you think is best, and do it quickly. The longer you take to act, the more time you have to talk yourself out of it, the longer you have to imagine the things that might go wrong. It's not enough to hope. Take action.
Here is a psychological principle that is worth reading over 25 times. Read it until it absolutely saturates you: To think confidently, act confidently. - from The Magic of Thinking Big by David J. Schwartz
· To think confidently, act confidently. You've heard the phrase "fake it 'til you make it". Research has shown that faking confidence actually leads to the real thing. If you're in a situation where you're not sure what to do, act like you know what to do. Act confident and you will become confident. (Note that this isn't license to be a jerk. It's not a license to lie.) Schwartz says that we can change our attitudes by changing our physical actions. He recommends five specific behaviors: sit in front, make eye contact, walk faster, speak up (offer your opinion), smile.
· Think like the other person. Remember that people are all the same. We each have the same fears and the same desires. Underneath, most folks are pretty nice. When you're in an uncomfortable situation, put yourself in the other person's shoes. While prepping for my talk last week, I used this technique to plan what I was going to say and how I was going to say it. I talked with a dozen financial planners to find out their concerns, and tried to address them in my talk. By doing this, I removed the fear that I wasn't addressing their interests.
· Maintain a positive mental attitude. In Success Through a Positive Mental Attitude, the authors write: "When [a person] is wrapped in the warm, secure belief that he will do well, he is actually able to do better than he knows. His defenses are relaxed; his guard down; he is able to stop spending emotional energy protecting himself from the possible hurts of failure; instead he spends his energy reaching for the probably rewards of success…Confidence has had a measurable effect on him - it has brought out the best in him."
· Get off your "but". In Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy, David D. Burns offers a variety of suggestions for building confidence and destroying fear. One of these is to learn to defeat a case of the "buts". Schwartz calls this excusitis, the "disease of failures". Burns says that the best way to deal with excuses is to argue with yourself. Every time you say, "I'd like to save money, but…", come up with a rebuttal to counter the argument. Keep going, fighting every excuse you make.
· Visualize success. In Feeling Good, David Burns also encourages readers to visualize success: "A powerful self-motivation method involves making a list of the advantages of a productive action you've been avoiding because it requires more self-discipline than you've been able to muster. Such a list will train you to look at the positive consequences of doing it." For example, if you've been holding back asking for a raise, make a list of only the positive possible outcomes. Once you've made the list, fantasize about your life after receiving the raise. Focus on the positive outcome that success will bring you.
· Look sharp. A lot of us experience poor self-esteem because we don't like the way we look. But we exacerbate the problem when we dress sloppily or are not well-groomed. I'm not pointing any fingers. My friends and family can readily attest that I'm one of the worst culprits. I'm often unshaven, dressed in sweats, slouched at my desk. Why? I lack self-confidence. But when I have an important meeting, the simple act of putting on nice slacks, a dress shirt, and a tie can change my mindset entirely. Take care of yourself.
· Do the right thing. if you do the right thing, and you do it well, what do you care what other people think? Successful people will always have critics. Learn from the critics or to ignore them, but don't let them bring you down. Do the right thing, and confidently own the consequences.
I must not fear. Fear is the mind-killer. Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration. I will face my fear. I will permit it to pass over me and through me. And when it has gone past I will turn the inner eye to see its path. Where the fear has gone there will be nothing. Only I will remain. - from Dune by Frank Herbert
· Keep things in perspective. I know a woman who is paralyzed by what other people might think of her. She's always on pins and needles, waiting for some cutting remark. Even small things in innocuous conversations become huge things in her mind, rebukes for imagined transgressions. This sort of thing saps any chance at self-confidence.
· Don't seek perfection. Remember that the perfect is the enemy of the good. This is a huge problem in my own life. Somewhere along the way, I've become a perfectionist. I only want others to see me at my very best, whether it's on the blog, on television, or even on Twitter. But this perfectionism takes work, and it saps my confidence. Do you know anyone who has ever been perfect? Me neither. Do your best and let go.
· Read the success literature. Research others who have succeeded. Self-help manuals get a bum rap, and many of them deserve it. But not all of them. There are many fantastic books out there that offer advice on how to improve your life. Read them. Learn from the experience of others. (I've found 50 Success Classics to be a powerful motivator [my review].)
· Don't compare yourself to others. Be yourself. I'll tell you a secret. There are a lot of personal finance blogs out there. I don't get to read them as often as I used to, but I do try to make the rounds once every week. Sometimes when I do this, I feel like giving up. I feel like quitting. I lose confidence. "I can't write that well," I think. "I can't cover retirement investing as well as Jim did." Comparing myself to others is counter-productive. It only makes me feel inadequate. Who cares what other people write, or how well? What's important is simply producing the best work I can. All I can be is myself.
The techniques I've listed are effective, but here's the thing: No list you find on the internet is going to magically make you more confident. No list is going to grant you instant CSS skills, or give you extra money, or make you a better writer. In order for these techniques to be effective, you have toact on them. You have to pick one or two and practice them. Then move on to another pair and practice those.
It's important to put these tips into action. Do something, if only for ten minutes a day. Tell yourself that you'll move toward your goals for ten minutes a day. If you don't succeed, do it again. Keep going until you do succeed. Never give up.
You gain strength, courage, and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face…You must do the thing you think you cannot do. - Eleanor Roosevelt
Further reading
I've barely scratched the surface of what it takes to develop self-confidence. If you, too, have struggled with this, I encourage you to borrow one of the following books from your public library. (These are the books mentioned in this article.)
· The Magic of Thinking Big by David J. Schwartz
· Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy by David D. Burns, M.D.
· How to Stop Worrying and Start Living by Dale Carnegie
· Success Through a Positive Mental Attitude by Napoleon Hill and W. Clement Stone
If you simply want to find more web reading related to this topic, check out the following:
· Zen Habits: Conquer the fears lurking in the dark corners of your mind
· Get Rich Slowly: The power of "yes": A simple way to get more out of life
· The Simple Dollar: Investing in yourself: Self-confidence
· Soul Shelter: The magic of thinking big
The Magic of Thinking Big - the book that inspired this post - is outstanding. It's sold millions of copies in the fifty years since it was published, and no wonder. On the surface it may seem like touchy-feely feelgood stuff, but deep down, it's built on strong psychological principles. Here's Tom Butler-Bowdon's summary of the book.
Moving forward
Tonight I will speak to a group of graduating seniors at Western Oregon University. I'll talk to them about debt and money management, and about pursuing their dreams.
When I gave this same talk last year, I was nervous. I was afraid. I was worried that I'd do poorly. Even after I'd finished, I thought it hadn't gone well, so I was surprised to learn that the group had given me high marks.
There's no guarantee that tonight's talk will be a success, of course, but I know one thing: I'm much more confident going into it than I was last year. I know that I've done this before. I know that last week I spoke before 200 financial planners. I have positive experience to draw from.
By facing my fears head-on, by taking action, I really have been able to build confidence and to destroy fear.
If one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams, and endeavors to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet with a success unexpected in common hours. - from Walden by Henry David Thoreau
恐懼是通往黑暗的必經(jīng)之路?謶謱(dǎo)致憤怒,憤怒帶來仇恨,而仇恨則帶來痛苦。-Yoda
上周我做了一件令我非常害怕的事情。我站在近200個(gè)財(cái)務(wù)規(guī)劃師面前,給他們講了理財(cái)博客為什么很好的原因。
我是個(gè)很有自信的作者。我寫博客有很長時(shí)間了,所以我知道自己的長處和短處。我已經(jīng)從讀者那里得到了相當(dāng)多的回饋,因此也懂得我是個(gè)有效率的溝通者-至少在我用文字的時(shí)候是這樣。我不太能編輯。我很擔(dān)心自己陷入某種狀況中而沒能把想法說出來。基本上我是很怕講話的。
如果我想把這種說話的機(jī)會(huì)拒之門外是很容易的一件事。有人要我在小組面前說話,我可以說"不".電臺(tái)或者電視臺(tái)邀我去做訪談,我也可以說"不".然而過去的兩年里,我一直在遵循自己的一個(gè)原則:就是對(duì)新機(jī)遇說一個(gè)"好"字。(至今他們也沒有違背我的行為準(zhǔn)則).
說"不"相當(dāng)于生活在恐懼之中。我的目標(biāo)是不斷地改善自己,要變得比今天的我更好。一種方式就是做那些我不敢做的事,把它們當(dāng)作挑戰(zhàn),然后從他們身上學(xué)習(xí)-甚至在我遭遇失敗的時(shí)候。
夢(mèng)想的魔力
去年11月中旬,當(dāng)?shù)匾患译娨暸_(tái)叫我上一檔直播節(jié)目。"我知道這是個(gè)很短的小通告,"制作人這樣寫道,"不過我們很想讓你參加這檔節(jié)目,如果你今晚有空的話。"
事實(shí)上,說你想克服自己的恐懼是一回事,但是真正去做卻是另一回事?謶质悄敲吹卣媲小.(dāng)我被邀請(qǐng)上直播節(jié)目的時(shí)候,我感到害怕。我記得2007年在西雅圖廣播電臺(tái)做的一起節(jié)目,那次節(jié)目糟透了。我想起了最近那些我很討厭的電視訪談,所以我很害怕接下來會(huì)發(fā)生什么。
不過,我又覺得事情已經(jīng)走上正軌了,我想到自己過去一年里說話的技巧已經(jīng)有所進(jìn)步了。我想到我對(duì)節(jié)約以及個(gè)人理財(cái)?shù)臒崆椋缓笪矣窒氲秸谧x的那本書,是在當(dāng)?shù)嘏f貨店里逃到的,只花了1.29美元。
The magic of thinking big是上世紀(jì)六十年代最暢銷書,由佐治亞州大學(xué)教授大衛(wèi)施華茲所寫,該書包含了很多實(shí)用的技巧和建議(還有很多趣事),解釋了達(dá)成大目標(biāo)時(shí)冒險(xiǎn)的力量。施華茲認(rèn)為:只有你自己相信自己了,其他人才會(huì)相信你。
因此,當(dāng)電視臺(tái)制作人問我是否想上節(jié)目時(shí),我想到了這個(gè)大目標(biāo)。"當(dāng)然,"我說。"我來。"我表現(xiàn)得很自信,不過內(nèi)心又很恐懼。我需要的是一些可以增強(qiáng)自信以及克服恐懼的技巧。
記住那些讓你感覺你的想法不太好的時(shí)候,或者人們會(huì)把想法強(qiáng)加在你身上,或是你被解雇了的時(shí)候-這些想法在三十年之后還會(huì)再次被你想起。你必須有勇氣-Francis Ford Coppola
如何建立信心,戰(zhàn)勝恐懼
當(dāng)我們沒自信時(shí),我們會(huì)做出錯(cuò)誤的決定。我們會(huì)在恐懼的前提下做出選擇,而不是以那些最好的東西為基礎(chǔ)。如果你缺乏自信,你可能會(huì)讓自己的生活充滿各種自毀式的行為。你可能做一份自己很厭惡的工作,你可能讓自己陷入債務(wù)之中無法自拔。你還可能發(fā)現(xiàn)自己從一段壞的戀情頻繁地?fù)Q到另外一段糟糕的戀情。沒有自信,我不會(huì)讓自己去追尋夢(mèng)想。
在the magic of thinking big一書里,David認(rèn)為所有的信心都是培養(yǎng)出來的。"沒有誰天生就有自信,"他寫道。"這些有自信的人會(huì)散發(fā)出自信,會(huì)戰(zhàn)勝憂慮,會(huì)在不同的地方,不同的時(shí)間里泰然處之,他們?cè)谌魏螆龊隙极@得自信。"
建立自信的過程很緩慢,一次一點(diǎn)點(diǎn)。我知道,要想戰(zhàn)勝恐懼,我就需要采取各種不同的技巧。以下是我多年以來采用的一些方法,其中有過去曾讓我走出債務(wù)危機(jī)的方法,還有讓我在上直播電視節(jié)目時(shí)找到自信,開口講話的方法:
1. 不要專注在失敗的經(jīng)驗(yàn)上。從你做對(duì)的事情上汲取經(jīng)驗(yàn)。上周我做的訪談跟完美一詞還差很遠(yuǎn)。但是如果我總想著自己說錯(cuò)的話,我會(huì)讓自己失去將來說話的機(jī)會(huì)。當(dāng)有人要我說話時(shí),我會(huì)害怕說"好".相反,我會(huì)試圖把注意力放到自己做得好的地方,這樣我就會(huì)在下次當(dāng)眾說話時(shí)強(qiáng)調(diào)這些優(yōu)點(diǎn)了。
2. 預(yù)演好的結(jié)果。在我做直播電視節(jié)目之前,我看了這個(gè)節(jié)目類似的訪談片段。(我并不?措娨暎愿杏X很新鮮。)我早早就到了臺(tái)里,因此我坐在車?yán),閉上眼睛,想象主持人問我相關(guān)問題時(shí)的情景。我想象自己和她開著玩笑。我想象這次訪談非常輕松愉快。
3. 不要拖延時(shí)間。拖延時(shí)間會(huì)造成更多的恐懼。當(dāng)你感到害怕時(shí),思考會(huì)是你的敵人。行動(dòng)。做出你認(rèn)為最好的行動(dòng),而且要快。你越久做出行動(dòng),你從恐懼中跳出來的時(shí)間將會(huì)更長,而你也會(huì)更多地去回想自己可能做錯(cuò)的地方。沒時(shí)間做祈禱了。行動(dòng)吧。
這是個(gè)心理學(xué)原理,值得讀上25遍。直到這句話充滿你的內(nèi)心:要想充滿信心地進(jìn)行思考,請(qǐng)先充滿信心地做出行動(dòng)。--摘自the magic of thinking big.
4. 要想充滿信心地進(jìn)行思考,請(qǐng)先充滿信心地做出行動(dòng)。你一定聽說過這句話:假裝自信,直到你真的變得很自信。研究表明裝自信確實(shí)可以讓自己自信。如果你所處的狀況是你不確定要做什么,那么你可以做自己知道要做的事情。充滿自信地行動(dòng),你就會(huì)變得充滿自信。(注意這并不表示你在犯傻,也不表示你在撒謊。)施華茲說我們可以通過改變身體上的行動(dòng)來改變態(tài)度。他推薦物種特別的身體動(dòng)作:坐到前面,眼神交流,走快點(diǎn),開口說話(說出看法),微笑。
5. 像其他人一樣思考。記住,人在這方面是一樣的。我們每個(gè)人都有相同的恐懼,相同的渴望。在這些表象之下,大多數(shù)人都很好。當(dāng)你處在一個(gè)不是很舒服的情境中時(shí),請(qǐng)讓自己站在別人的角度想想問題。上周我去做訪談時(shí),我就用了這個(gè)方法,計(jì)劃了一下自己將說些什么,以及如何說等等。我和十幾個(gè)財(cái)務(wù)策劃師聊天,以找到他們關(guān)注的焦點(diǎn),再試圖把他們?nèi)谌氲轿业恼勗捴。通過這種做法,我擺脫了恐懼:怕自己說的讓他們不感興趣。
6. 保持一種積極的心理狀態(tài)。在通過積極的心理狀態(tài)走向成功這本書中,作者寫道:當(dāng)某個(gè)人充分相信自己,信任自己的時(shí)候,他就會(huì)做得好,他實(shí)際上能比自己認(rèn)為得更好。他的思想防線很放松,他能讓自己停止消耗感情能量來保護(hù)自己不受可能發(fā)生的挫敗的傷害;相反,他能夠積聚起能量去獲取成功可能帶來的獎(jiǎng)賞。自信對(duì)他產(chǎn)生了相當(dāng)大的影響-它帶給他最大值的成功感受、
7. 扔掉你的托詞"但是".在感覺良好:全新的情緒治療這本書里,David D.Burns給了讀者很多建議,讓他們建立自信,戰(zhàn)勝恐懼。其中之一就是學(xué)會(huì)戰(zhàn)勝各種各樣的"但是".施華茲把這個(gè)稱作托詞,也就是"導(dǎo)致失敗的頑疾".Burns說對(duì)付這種托詞最好的方法就是跟自己辯解。每次當(dāng)你說,"我是想存錢的,可…"你都用一個(gè)反例來對(duì)付這個(gè)托詞。持續(xù)進(jìn)行下去,跟你自己的每一個(gè)托詞作斗爭。
8. 看到成功的未來。在感覺良好一書里,David Burns還鼓勵(lì)讀者想象成功時(shí)的場景。"一種強(qiáng)有力的自我激勵(lì)方式一定包含了一系列有成果的行動(dòng)的優(yōu)勢(shì),而這些優(yōu)點(diǎn)正是你一直在避免的,因?yàn)樗枰嗟淖月,比你能做到的程度大得多?quot;比如,如果你一直不敢要求加薪,你可以列出一個(gè)含有各種積極結(jié)果的表。一旦你列出這個(gè)表格,想象一下自己加薪之后的生活。一定專注在成功將帶給你的積極意義的結(jié)果上。
9. 注意穿著。很多人都經(jīng)歷過自信心不足的情況,因?yàn)槲覀兌疾幌矚g自己的長相外貌。不過當(dāng)我們穿著隨意,邋遢的時(shí)候,我們把這個(gè)問題加重了。我并不是要指責(zé)誰。我的朋友和家人都能證明,我是個(gè)最壞最壞的人。我常常不刮胡子,穿著汗衫,無精打采地坐在桌子上。為什么呢?我缺乏自信,但是當(dāng)我有重要會(huì)議時(shí),我只要穿上好一點(diǎn)的寬松褲子,一件襯衣,一條領(lǐng)帶就可以完全改變我的思想狀態(tài)。請(qǐng)你照顧好自己。
10. 做對(duì)的事。如果你做對(duì)的事,你就會(huì)做好,你怎么還會(huì)關(guān)心其他人怎么看你?成功的人總會(huì)遭到人們的批評(píng)。從批評(píng)中學(xué)習(xí),或者忽略它,但不要讓批評(píng)毀掉你。做對(duì)的事情,并且自信地得到結(jié)果。
我不能害怕?謶质撬枷氲臍⑹帧?謶謺(huì)帶來毀滅性的災(zāi)難-小死。我會(huì)面對(duì)恐懼,我會(huì)讓它路過,讓它穿越我。當(dāng)恐懼穿越之后,我會(huì)在內(nèi)心看到它的軌跡?謶窒Я,那么什么都沒有了。只有我,還在這里。--摘自Frank Herbert的Dune.
11. 看事物的全景。我認(rèn)識(shí)一個(gè)女士,她總是對(duì)別人如何看待她感到不知所措。她總是等待別人說一些刻薄尖銳的話。無關(guān)緊要的對(duì)話中談?wù)摰男∈略谒抢锞妥兂珊艽蟮囊患拢荫R上演變成一種侵犯。這些事讓自信的力量幾乎消耗殆盡。
12. 不要追求完美。還記得完美是好的敵人吧。這是我生活中的一大問題。不知道從什么時(shí)候開始,我變成了一個(gè)完美主義者。我只想讓別人看到自己最好的一面,不管是在博客,電視上,或者甚至是在Twitter上。但是這種完美主義需要費(fèi)心思,而且削弱了我的信心。你認(rèn)識(shí)總是表現(xiàn)完美的人嗎?我是沒有。請(qǐng)你竭盡全力,順其自然吧。
13. 讀一讀成功故事。研究那些獲得成功的人。自助式的指南受到人們的譴責(zé),不過這些指南中很多都確是如此。只是并非所有的書。有很多可以提供如何改善生活的不錯(cuò)的書籍。讀一讀。從其他人的經(jīng)驗(yàn)里學(xué)習(xí)。(我看的是五十個(gè)成功經(jīng)典故事,這是個(gè)非常有效的自我激勵(lì)書籍。)
14. 不要拿自己和別人作比較。做自己。我要告訴你一個(gè)秘密。網(wǎng)上有很多個(gè)人理財(cái)博客。我現(xiàn)在沒以前那樣經(jīng)常讀他們了,不過我確實(shí)試過每周都去兜一圈的做法。有時(shí)候我這么做了,感覺真的想放棄。我想洗手不干。沒了自信。"我沒法寫那么好,"我想。"我沒法寫得像吉姆那么好。"拿自己跟別人比較的反效果非常明顯。它讓我感覺自己的不足。誰管別人寫得什么呢,或者多好呢?重要的是寫出我能寫出的最好的文章。我能做的就是我自己。
我列在上面的方法很有效,但請(qǐng)注意這一點(diǎn):網(wǎng)上看到的方法也好,技巧也好都不會(huì)神奇地讓你變得更自信。沒有哪些方法會(huì)馬上帶給你什么技能之類的,或者額外給你一筆錢,或者讓你成為一個(gè)更好的作者。要想讓這些方法變得有效,你必須據(jù)此采取行動(dòng)。你得從中挑出一兩個(gè)實(shí)踐它。然后,再換兩外兩個(gè)再進(jìn)行實(shí)踐。
把這些小貼士付諸行動(dòng)非常重要。你得做點(diǎn)什么,即使只是每天十分鐘。告訴自己每天的那十分鐘里你將朝向自己的目標(biāo)邁進(jìn)。如果你沒有成功,再做一次。保持前進(jìn)的狀態(tài),直到成功。永不言放棄。
每次當(dāng)你真正停下來看著自己的恐懼的時(shí)候,你都獲得了力量,勇氣,以及信心。你必須去做你認(rèn)為自己做不到的事情。--Eleanor Roosevelt
延伸閱讀
我寫的這些在培養(yǎng)自信方面還沒有抓到皮毛。如果你也曾跟自己的恐懼斗爭過的話,我建議你到公共圖書館借以下書籍來看看。(這是這篇文章提到的幾本書。)
1. The Magic of Thinking Big 大衛(wèi)施華茲
2. Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy 大衛(wèi)伯恩斯
3. How to Stop Worrying and Start Living 達(dá)樂卡內(nèi)基
4. Success Through a Positive Mental Attitude 拿破侖希爾
如果你只是想找相關(guān)這個(gè)主題的網(wǎng)絡(luò)資源,請(qǐng)查看以下內(nèi)容:
1. 禪的習(xí)慣:Conquer the fears lurking in the dark corners of your mind
2. 緩慢變富:The power of "yes": A simple way to get more out of life
3. 美元美元:Investing in yourself: Self-confidence
4. 精神避難所:The magic of thinking big
The magic of Thinking Big啟發(fā)我寫了這篇博文-這本書非常精彩。過去五十年間,它出版發(fā)行了百萬冊(cè),而這一點(diǎn)都不奇怪。表面上它看起來似乎是個(gè)感覺良好的東西,但是更深層次上,它是一本建立在深刻心理學(xué)原理的書。這里是湯姆巴特勒伯頓寫的該書的梗概。
向前進(jìn)
今晚我會(huì)為西俄勒岡大學(xué)給一群高年級(jí)學(xué)生演講,我會(huì)給他們講有關(guān)債務(wù)和金錢管理的話題,還有追求夢(mèng)想的內(nèi)容。
去年我演講同一個(gè)話題的時(shí)候,我很緊張。我很擔(dān)心。我怕自己做得很差。甚至當(dāng)我完成演講的時(shí)候,我還是覺得好像不太好,因此當(dāng)我知道小組給我高分的時(shí)候,我感到很驚訝。
當(dāng)然,今晚的演講也不能保證就一定成功,但是我知道一件事情:我比去年更自信了。我知道我從前做過,我知道上周我還在200位財(cái)務(wù)策劃師面前大談特談的,我有積極的經(jīng)驗(yàn)可以吸取。
通過直面恐懼,采取行動(dòng),我已經(jīng)建立起真正的自信了,我戰(zhàn)勝了恐懼。
如果一個(gè)人充滿自信地朝著夢(mèng)想的方向前進(jìn),并且努力去追求自己想要的生活的時(shí)候,他會(huì)在某個(gè)普通的日子里遇到自己不曾想到的成功。--摘自亨利大衛(wèi)梭羅的"瓦爾登湖"