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While the Iron is Hot
I devoured that book in about a day, it's utterly fascinating for all the reasons you mention. The author joined forces with Mystery to run pick-up seminars, and all their techniques can be easily tweaked and applied to just about any setting that would otherwise be intimidating. It's definitely not only useful to wannabe ladies' men.
One thing I noticed though. Techniques like that are great for inspiring confidence, but fostering real relationships has to come from within. Getting a girl to come home with you, or give you her phone number, is definitely not the same as building a relationship with her. That's an entirely different set of "skills," for lack of a better word...
Practice makes perfect, whether you are talking to to people, giving a presentation, or building the next new website. Very few people have confidence right off the bat, and grow more comfortable/confident each time they do something.
You can be confident at anything, it just takes some trial runs.
for me it's because i know all the tricks
confidence?
well sure
but it's also about making them think they have something interesting to say
(Here via Liz Strauss....)
Confidence can be circumstantial. Maybe I start off with lots of confidence, but depending on the reactions I observe - encouragement or dismissal, say - my confidence can, umm, grow or shrink.
I think there are two keys to being confident: 1) How we account for victories and failures (do you give yourself credit, or blame/credit the circumstances) and 2) Trying a lot. If you try a lot, fail a lot, but win a lot, I think the confidence sticks. If you only try once or twice, and you fail either or both times, those failures loom a lot larger than if you try, say, 100 times and fail 75. You've still got 25 victories there, and that means a lot.
If they can't eat you, do it.
This, by the way, I know, but execution is another thing.
Other connections: A client just mentioned yesterday that TV show. She also got a nice insight from it, in her case on having a good value proposition (heh heh).
yes, you can make/create your own confidence, but I believe there is someone or something, that instigates self empowerment.
I've stuttered all my life so my confidence is really hampered by the fact that I appear unintelligent despite what I'm taking about! the only thing I do to help me feel confident is knowing what I'm talking about. For example, I'm not nervous in job interviews because I know what my skills are and can prove them. No need to fake confidence there! If I'm talking to a hot girl, my confidence depends on how friendly she is (I know, very anti-TheGame of me).
Also maintaining eye contact with your audience is a small but effective way to boost confidence.
I agree with Rick M. "Confidence can be circumstantial". You can be totally confident in one area and lacking in another.
For me, I found that one sure way to destroy confidence was to appear unsure. In my former occupation as a tech intructor I never used the words "I don't know" if I didn't know the answer. That was a surefire way to lose my classes confidence in me. If I didn't know an answer, I always used "that is an excellent question" and later researched it and got back to the student.
Unfortunately, I'm not very confident. It affects many aspects of my life -- even my online projects. I often have (seemingly) good ideas, but I don't put them in practice because I'm afraid no one will be interested. However, I'm trying to overcome this problem. :)