Month: December 2023

  • 5 Ways to Overcome Self-Doubt

    Blog post title graphic with a modern pink flower and beige background that says 5 Ways to Overcome Self-doubt powerfulcalm.com

    What to do when self-doubt clouds your confidence and blocks your motivation.

    Do you find yourself questioning your beliefs or your point of view? Maybe you often wonder if you’ve made the right decision and second-guess yourself, replaying the various options in your mind on repeat. If so, you may be experiencing self-doubt.

    Self-doubt is questioning yourself about the truth about who you are and what you’re capable of. It could be focused on your thoughts, beliefs, emotions, opinions, decisions, self-views, or any point of view you hold about yourself. You might feel uneasy and question your self-competence or capacity to do what you want.

    Many of my clients who struggle with self-doubt fluctuate between judging and doubting their abilities and feeling confident in their capacity to meet their goals. Sometimes, you might be skeptical, and at other times, you may feel optimistic.

    Do you experience self-doubt?

    Here are some research-backed questions to help you determine if you’re experiencing self-doubt:

    • Do you feel unsure about your life?
    • Do you lack confidence that you’ll accomplish your goals?
    • Are you uncertain about your level of competence or capacity to be successful?

    How do you know if it’s self-doubt?

    Because self-doubt feels multidimensional – critical, judgmental, pessimistic, and so unpleasant that it’s often dealt with unconsciously—some can be helpful and others unhelpful. Here are a few of the ways self-doubt manifests:

    Self-handicapping

    Self-handicapping is a defensive strategy that attempts to soften the harsh reality of failure with reasons for your mistakes that aren’t your fault. Stress eating, procrastination, and drinking are a few ways that enable you to blame your struggles on something other than yourself. But, this strategy often worsens self-doubt and leaves you feeling like a failure.

    Overcompensating

    Overachievement is a way of overcompensating that helps prevent mistakes and failures. Self-doubt often leads to the belief that the more regular effort you put in or the more competence you have, the more you need to succeed. Unfortunately, this is often a mismatch of what’s required to stop struggling with self-doubt.

    Imposter syndrome

    Imposter syndrome is when you feel like the success you experience is not an accurate reflection of your abilities and your success is a result of “just getting lucky.” There are many reasons why this happens, and one of them is that you’re afraid you won’t be able to keep up with your success. You might tell yourself your success is due to luck, timing, or contacts.

    5 Ways to Overcome Self-Doubt

    1. Unconditional self-worth

    Unconditional is the key – it’s not dependent on a particular result- it simply is. It doesn’t matter how others treat you because your self-worth depends only on how you value yourself as a human being.

    2. Unconditional love

    Love yourself “warts and all,” as they say. No matter your mistakes or the heights of your success, like unconditional self-worth above, you love your whole being.

    3. Growth

    Be in a state of evolution where you continue to be a lifelong learner and build on your strengths.

    4. Use positive self-talk

    Say things to yourself that are kind, positive, or supportive. Expect that you’ll make mistakes, and you’ll learn and grow in the process as you support yourself with positive self-talk.

    5. Affirm yourself

    The beliefs we have about ourselves sometimes need a reminder. Affirmations are a way to do that, as well as a way to keep goals in mind. Moving toward what you want is more accessible than pushing against what you don’t and hoping you’ll receive what you want.

    Here are three powerful affirmations:

    • I am strong and capable
    • I am doing my best, and that is enough
    • I am capable of anything I put my mind to

    Finally, here are two questions that can help you to focus as well:

    • How can I be confident even when I make mistakes or experience failure?
    • How can I be confident even when others doubt my abilities or withhold love, encouragement, or criticism?

    Developing a growth mindset helps to maintain your self-worth and can support you to believe in yourself even when times are challenging, which helps to prevent self-doubt from taking over.

    Conclusion

    Self-doubt is an uncomfortable thought process and it’s a solvable problem. Fortunately, there are ways to overcome self-doubt and keep your momentum moving forward confidently with unconditional self-worth, love, growth, positive self-talk, and affirmations.

  • How to Stop Getting in Your Way: 6 Ways to End Self-Sabotage

    Blog title graphic with modern red flowers that says How to stop Getting in your own way: 6 ways to end self-sabotage powerfulcalm.com

    Find out how you can stop self-sabotaging behaviors and achieve your goals.

    Do you ever want something so much you can envision it happening, yet procrastination hits, and you stop yourself before you even start?

    When I watch the Olympics, it seems like there’s usually at least one race where the runners round the track, and it seems as if the lead runner runs out of energy and winds up finishing last. In the post-race interviews, there aren’t any physical explanations like illness or lack of enough nutrition, so what is it?

    When your belief in yourself doesn’t match your desire for what you want in life, self-sabotage can happen.

    Sometimes, to protect ourselves, we adopt beliefs to prevent harm that results in more damage, not less. There are many adages like:

    • Life is suffering.
    • Our family is burdened with ______ problems.
    • There’s always another problem just around the corner.

    While all of these statements are true, they aren’t always accurate.

    • There is suffering in life, as well as joy, fun, and happiness too.
    • Some families are predisposed to particular health issues, problematic dynamics, or deficits in mindsets, but not everyone and not all of the time.
    • Unexpected problems crop up – if you have a car, you’ll get a flat tire at some point, usually at an inconvenient place and time, but that doesn’t happen often.

    When you doubt that you can move past the beliefs that hold you back, even when you have the skills and abilities to do so, self-sabotages will find a way to throw a wrench in your plans.

    Probably the most straightforward example is the infamous New Year’s promise –

    • Invest in new workout clothes.
    • Buy a gym membership.
    • Make a meal plan.

    Typically, most people last anywhere from two weeks to a month on their new plan before they start to relax their commitments. You’ve probably asked yourself why this keeps happening when you value your health and well-being. When you feel locked into a pattern repeating like this, even though you want a different outcome, you’re likely experiencing self-sabotage.

    Why does self-sabotage happen?

    Self-sabotage happens when your beliefs, thoughts, and actions keep you from accomplishing what you want. Sometimes, this is an unconscious process, and you do it without realizing it. When you sabotage yourself, the self-doubt leads to thought patterns that create obstacles to achieving your goals.

    Sometimes, you’re aware of self-sabotage, like when you know that your Pilates class starts at 5:00, and you keep trying to squeeze in one more email reply at 4:40 when it takes 20 minutes to get to the studio, and you know you’ll be late. Other times, self-sabotage is a bit more subtle, even unconscious. For example, distancing yourself from your partner after they say, “I love you.” In this example, you may unconsciously protect yourself if the relationship doesn’t work. Still, at the same time, you may also be sabotaging a potentially successful relationship – which is what you’ve always wanted.

    Although self-sabotage usually results in what you don’t want, the purpose is to protect you, keep you safe and prevent any danger or harm. Our minds seek what is familiar, which helps us to feel safe. We are also limited by what we believe our capacity allows and will unconsciously align ourselves with those beliefs. When we embrace new and unfamiliar beliefs and goals, it can trigger self-sabotaging reactions. And that’s important to remember self-sabotage serves a function. Our future selves are responsible for being aware and responding with abundant compassion, foresight, and optimism.

    How to Stop Self-Sabotage

    1. Increase self-awareness

    Identify what you feel and think when you experience self-sabotaging behaviors. Are there specific patterns you get stuck in? If so, look for what happens before you feel or think in ways that stop you from succeeding. You may find that you unconsciously sabotage your work by making simple mistakes that are easily correctable if you slow down and double-check.

    2. Practice mindfulness

    Focused, non-judgmental awareness helps prevent conscious choices and raise awareness of feelings that lead to self-sabotage. When you approach your life with a foundation of mindfulness, you learn more about yourself and what you need to live without regrets.

    3. Increase your self-compassion

    Increasing your self-compassion is related to being happier, wiser, and more emotionally resilient. When you practice self-compassion, you can move quickly from where you are now to where you want to be.

    4. Practice acceptance

    Practicing acceptance is easier when you keep two things in mind. The first is that self-compassion helps to soften self-criticism. Second, to achieve your desired success, you must start from where you are. One way to do this is with self-talk like, “What’s happened is done and cannot be changed. I can choose a different path today.”

    5. Reframe

    It is challenging to think of many situations where only one point of view is valid. Fortunately, in most of our day-to-day lives, you could assume a different point of view and change your perspective. Reframing is one way to retrain the brain to become more flexible so you can choose which point of view moves your life forward to attain your goals.

    6. Fail forward

    Self-sabotage often starts with a fear of failure or rejection and leads to avoidance of trying something difficult. If you don’t try – you can’t fail! In this case, you are preventing failure, which results in unconsciously sabotaging yourself. For example, if you don’t apply for a new job when your colleague gets promoted, you don’t fail because you were never considered.

    Summary

    Self-sabotage gets in the way of achieving your goals when your belief in yourself – your confidence that you can grow in your capacity to accept the life you desire is shaky. These strategies can help you give yourself the support you need to become more self-accepting and compassionate and believe in yourself.