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Showing posts with label success habits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label success habits. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Building Confidence Through Action

 


Building Confidence Through Action: The Elite Way to Strengthen Self-Belief

Confidence isn’t inherited — it’s created.
It’s not something the elite are born with; it’s something they build, one decision, one repetition, one challenge at a time.

While many wait to feel confident before they take action, elite performers understand the truth:

Action comes first. Confidence follows.

Every breakthrough begins with movement — not certainty.


Confidence Is Built, Not Found

The misconception about confidence is that it’s a personality trait.
In reality, it’s a muscle — strengthened through consistency and courage.

Each time you act in alignment with your goals, even when uncertain, you send a message to your mind:

“I can trust myself.”

That trust compounds. It becomes your foundation — unshakable, quiet, and real.

Tony Robbins teaches that confidence is the result of “stacking evidence.”
The more you act, the more evidence you collect that you’re capable.
Soon, belief becomes biology.


How the Elite Build Unbreakable Self-Belief

1. They Take Action Before They Feel Ready

Mel Robbins5 Second Rule is built on this principle: confidence grows through movement, not motivation.
She explains that waiting for confidence is the biggest form of self-sabotage — because the emotion only arrives after courage.

Elite performers act, then adjust.
They replace hesitation with momentum.


2. They Build Micro-Confidence Through Mastery

Ed Mylett, peak performance coach, calls this “the power of one more.”
Every rep, every phone call, every small win builds identity.

Each “one more” moment rewires the brain to expect success.
Over time, self-doubt transforms into self-certainty — not because fear disappears, but because you’ve proven to yourself that you can handle it.


3. They Reframe Failure as Feedback

For the elite, failure isn’t identity — it’s information.
Sara Blakely, founder of Spanx, credits her father for asking one question at the dinner table:

“What did you fail at today?”

The question taught her that mistakes meant growth.
That mindset turned rejection into resilience — and resilience into global success.

The elite don’t fear falling short; they fear staying still.





4. They Surround Themselves With Reinforcement

Confidence multiplies through environment.
When you’re around people who play at a higher level, you subconsciously rise to meet them.

That’s why elite achievers constantly invest in masterminds, workshops, and live seminars — not just for strategy, but for energy.

Immersive spaces like these create psychological alignment.
You stop questioning what’s possible — because you’re surrounded by proof that it is.

Join the waiting list 👉 Tony Robbins Events


How to Start Building Your Own Confidence

  1. Take one small, imperfect action every day. Confidence grows from evidence, not perfection.

  2. Track your wins. Write down moments where you kept your word — they matter more than praise.

  3. Reframe fear. Instead of asking “What if I fail?”, ask “What will I learn?”

  4. Create a support environment. Connect with accountability groups or personal development communities.

  5. Immerse yourself. Attend events or circles that stretch your mindset — proximity builds belief.


From Ordinary to Elite: The Confidence Journey

The elite didn’t start elite.
They were ordinary people who took extraordinary levels of consistent action.

  • Oprah Winfrey faced public rejection early in her career but chose growth over defeat.

  • David Goggins went from 300 pounds and self-doubt to becoming one of the world’s most disciplined endurance athletes.

  • Richard Branson started his first business from a payphone — driven by the belief that courage mattered more than credentials.

Each built confidence through repetition, not reassurance.
Each trusted action more than emotion.

That’s what separates dreamers from doers — and followers from leaders.


Final Thoughts: Action Creates Identity

Confidence is not the absence of fear; it’s the decision to move forward in spite of it.
When you act, even when uncertain, you build trust in yourself.
And when self-trust deepens, confidence becomes automatic.

The elite live by one truth:

Courage builds confidence. Confidence builds success.

Start small. Move daily. Trust your own evidence.
That’s how ordinary people create extraordinary results — and rise into the elite.




Thursday, June 14, 2018

Okay, so you messed up. Now what?

Mindset · Self-Worth · Confidence · 2026


You Messed Up. Good. Here's Why That Makes You More Capable Than You Think.


The relationship between failure, shame and confidence is not what most people believe. Understanding it could be the most liberating thing you do this year.


Something went wrong. Perhaps it was a mistake at work, a conversation that landed badly, a decision you immediately wished you could take back. Perhaps it was something smaller — a misused word, an awkward moment, a comment that came out wrong.

And then the response came. Not a calm, rational acknowledgement of what happened. Something far more visceral. A wave of heat, tension, shame. An inner voice that arrived instantly and without mercy.

You always do this. You never get it right. What is wrong with you?

If you know that experience — and most people who struggle with confidence know it intimately — then this article is for you. Not to offer platitudes about how everyone makes mistakes. Not to tell you to simply think more positively. But to show you, clearly and honestly, what is actually happening when shame takes hold — and how to fundamentally change your relationship with failure in a way that builds real, lasting confidence.

“There is no failure. Only feedback.” — Robert Allen

Why Failure Hits Some People So Much Harder

The intensity of the shame response after a mistake is not random. It is the direct result of three interlocking patterns that, once you understand them, begin to lose their grip.

The first is low self-esteem. When you do not fundamentally like or value yourself, you apply a standard to your own behaviour that you would never apply to anyone else. A friend makes the same mistake and you comfort them. You make it and you prosecute yourself. The measure is entirely different because the subject — you — is perceived as less deserving of grace.

The second is perfectionism. When you have decided, consciously or otherwise, that mistakes are unacceptable, every error becomes magnified. It isn't just that you did something wrong — it is evidence that you are wrong. Perfectionism does not drive excellence. It drives paralysis, avoidance, and a crushing fear of being seen to fail.

The third is the ancient wiring of the brain. The amygdala — the part of the brain responsible for threat detection and the fight-or-flight response — does not distinguish between physical danger and social danger. For our ancestors, social rejection was genuinely life-threatening. To be cast out from the tribe was to face the wilderness alone. That fear is encoded deeply, and for many people, the prospect of being judged, laughed at, or seen as incompetent triggers a genuine physiological alarm response. Your body reacts as though survival is at stake — because evolutionarily, it once was.

Understanding this does not make the response disappear. But it does something equally important: it removes the shame from having the response. You are not weak. You are not broken. You are human, with a nervous system that was designed for a world that no longer exists — and you can learn to work with it rather than be controlled by it.


The Downward Spiral — And How to Recognise It

There is a cycle that plays out in people who carry low confidence, and it is worth naming clearly because the moment you can see a pattern, you begin to have power over it.

Low self-regard leads to less tolerance for mistakes. Less tolerance for mistakes makes mistakes feel catastrophic when they occur. The catastrophic response generates shame and self-criticism. Shame and self-criticism reinforce low self-regard. And the cycle continues, tightening with every turn.

The cruelest part of this spiral is that it actually increases the likelihood of making mistakes. When we are anxious, self-conscious, and operating in a state of low-grade fear, our cognitive resources are depleted. We perform below our ability. We say the wrong thing, miss the detail, stumble in the moment — not because we are incapable, but because we are afraid. Which then, of course, confirms the original belief.

This is not a character flaw. It is a system — and systems can be dismantled.

“You are not your mistakes. You are not your struggles. You are here, now, with the power to shape what comes next.”

The Counterintuitive Truth About Confident People and Mistakes

Here is something that challenges almost everything most people believe about confidence and failure: the people you perceive as most confident make significantly more mistakes than those with low confidence.

They do. Not despite their confidence — because of it.

Confident people attempt more. They take risks, try new things, put themselves forward, experiment, fail, adjust, and try again. They do this not because failure doesn't affect them — it does — but because their identity is not tied to the outcome. They know, at a fundamental level, that a mistake does not define them. It informs them.

People with low confidence, by contrast, often make fewer visible mistakes — because they avoid the situations where mistakes might occur. They stay quiet in meetings. They don't submit the application. They don't launch the idea. They remain safe. And in remaining safe, they remain exactly where they are.

The path to confidence is not through perfection. It is through accumulated evidence that you can attempt things, fail at some of them, recover, and grow. Every mistake you make and survive is a deposit into the account of self-belief. Every time you show up despite the fear, you prove to yourself that you can.




There Is Always Hope. Always.

If you have spent years in the cycle described in this article — the shame, the self-criticism, the avoidance, the paralysis — it is important to say this clearly: it is never too late to change it. Not at any age. Not after any number of years. Not after any quantity of mistakes.

The brain is neuroplastic. It changes in response to experience throughout a lifetime. The patterns that were built can be rebuilt. The beliefs that were formed can be reformed. It requires intention, the right tools, and consistent practice — but it is absolutely possible. Thousands of people have done exactly that, starting from a place far darker than where you may be now.

You have not run out of time. You have not made too many mistakes. You are not too far gone. The version of you that operates from genuine self-worth, that treats failure as data rather than devastation, that shows up without the crippling weight of shame — that version is not a fantasy. It is a direction. And every step in that direction counts.

Never give up on becoming who you are capable of being.


A Method for the Next Time Shame Arrives

Knowledge changes perspective. Practice changes behaviour. The next time you make a mistake and feel the familiar wave of shame begin to rise, try this four-step method before you do anything else.

Step 1: Stop
Whatever you are doing in that moment — replaying the moment, composing apologies in your head, catastrophising — stop. Consciously interrupt the spiral before it builds momentum.

Step 2: Breathe
Ten slow, deliberate breaths. This is not a cliché — it is neurological first aid. Deep breathing activates the parasympathetic nervous system and begins to bring the amygdala response down from its peak. You cannot think clearly from inside a threat response. Breathing creates the space to think.

Step 3: Examine the thought
Look at what your inner voice is saying. Not to argue with it, but to examine it. Ask: Is this thought factually true? Is it helpful? Is it something I would say to a friend in the same situation? Thoughts are not facts. They are interpretations — and they can be questioned.

Step 4: Choose your response
Ask yourself: Do I want to carry shame about this — or do I want to accept what happened, extract what I can learn, and move forward? Both are available to you. One keeps you stuck. One moves you forward. The choice, genuinely and powerfully, is yours.


When You're Ready to Go Deeper

The four-step method above is a powerful tool for the moment. But if the pattern of shame, self-criticism and low confidence has been present for years — if it is shaping your relationships, your career, your willingness to pursue what you want — then the most valuable thing you can do is address it at the root.

That root is your beliefs about yourself. The deep, often unconscious convictions about your worth, your capability, and what you deserve. Changing those beliefs is not difficult — but it does require the right guidance and a structured approach.

Recommended Resource

Life Optimization Coaching Program

For coaches and determined self-improvers who are ready to do the inner work properly.

The Life Optimization Coaching Program is designed for two groups of people: coaches who want to master their own mindset before leading others, and individuals who are simply determined to build a better version of themselves — on their own terms, at their own pace.

It works directly on the beliefs, habits and emotional patterns that keep capable people stuck — including the shame and self-criticism that turns every mistake into a crisis. It is one of the most accessible and affordable entry points into serious personal development available, and it is designed to deliver real, lasting change rather than temporary motivation.

Whether you are a coach looking to strengthen your own foundation before serving clients, or someone who has simply decided that this is the year you stop letting fear and self-doubt run the show — this programme meets you exactly where you are.

Start Your Life Optimization Journey

The Permission You've Been Waiting For

You are allowed to get things wrong.

You are allowed to try something, fail at it, look foolish, feel embarrassed, pick yourself up, and try again. You are allowed to be in the process of becoming rather than the finished article. You are allowed to be human — genuinely, imperfectly, beautifully human — without that being a source of shame.

Every person you admire for their confidence, their poise, their apparent ease in the world — every single one of them has a history of mistakes, embarrassments, failures, and moments they would rather forget. The difference is not that they escaped those moments. It is that they did not let those moments define them.

Go out there. Attempt things. Fail at some of them. Learn. Adjust. Try again. And as you do, watch what begins to happen to your belief in yourself — because confidence is not something you are given. It is something you build, one imperfect attempt at a time.

There is always hope. It is never too late. And you are more capable than you currently believe.

Your Growth Starts Here

If this article resonated, your next step is your free VIP Performance Playbook — a practical guide to building the vision, identity and strategy that turns insight into lasting change.

Download the Free VIP Performance Playbook

This post contains affiliate links. I only recommend programmes I believe genuinely serve you.

Elite VIP Circle · Mindset. Self-Worth. Freedom. · 2026

Tuesday, June 12, 2018

Luck has nothing to do with it

That’s right: Luck has nothing to do with it, as some allegedly "fortunate" people say. And in this case, "it" doesn’t just mean confidence.

It means life. Life as you'd like it to be. And the life that we see someone leading, when we immediately consider them "lucky".

See, whenever someone seems to reap all the rewards in life, we tend to think of them as "fortunate" or "lucky", yeah?

Well, would you believe me if I told you that ascribing "luck" to anyone or anything is potentially harmful to us?

What exactly is luck anyway? Many people would probably define it as something like, "when things coincidentally fall out to your advantage". But is it really just that?

And more importantly, would we need more than merely coincidence to receive the gifts of life?

(SPOILER ALERT: Yes. Yes it does.)



When Michael Jackson recorded the "Thriller" album, did it sell millions because of "luck"? Or was it because he had spent his entire childhood and adolescence working his derrière off, meticulously honing his craft and gathering a hugely talented team of producers, songwriters and A&R people behind him?

When Steve Jobs released the first iPhone, did it become hugely successful because of "luck"? Or was it because he dared to take chances, push the envelope, fulfil the needs that his customers had -- even ones they didn’t realize they had -- and amass an army of professional developers and marketers behind him?

Sure, Michael Jackson was probably as close to being the proverbial natural talent as they come. And Steve Jobs, according to many, was a natural visionary who simply thought outside the box and dreamt big.

But what good would that have done them if they hadn’t put in the work, insisted upon their dreams, and kept at it for years and years?
Luck has nothing to do with it because "it"doesn’t happen without taking action.

Here’s another thing:

Have you ever seen "Forrest Gump"? If not, it’s a fine movie, and you should see it at least once.*


Forrest Gump, our titular protagonist, is clearly slow-witted, but likeable. And he somehow manages to walk through life and attract all kinds of success and fortune as he cluelessly goes along. Only he never realizes it. Because success and fortune simply doesn’t resonate with his humble mind.

Let’s pause here for a moment. Now, think about your own life.

Have you ever learned a new word, and then in the following days and weeks you saw and heard that word everywhere?

Or have you ever been unemployed and looked for jobs, and all of a sudden job applications are everywhere?

I know, right?

The key word here is awareness.

Forrest Gump doesn’t consciously experience fame and fortune, because his awareness is on a different level. When we’re consciously aware of something, we’re gonna find it.

Not because there’s more of it, but simply because we’ve become aware of it. Like a hunter who deliberately ignores anything but the potential sights and sounds of his prey.
Luck has nothing to do with it, because what good would all the coincidence in the world do us if we weren’t aware of it?

"But wait a minute! What was that thing you said about how ascribing luck to anyone could be "harmful"??"

Yeah, see, that’s because it’s something that non-fident people tend to do. Which is rarely beneficial.

It’s when we’re non-fident that we tend to think in terms of "luck" — and "bad luck". Specifically, we tend to think that other people get all the luck, and that we’re victims of unfortunate circumstances.

This is a conveniently easy way of thinking, because it takes the responsibility for our lives out of our hands. And for the same reason, it’s also a dangerous way of thinking.

But when we allow ourselves to go for the life we want, consistently taking action and raising our awareness will make sure that we get it.



Some people might be born with certain advantages, yes. But imagine how many people never put that advantage to any use. Either because they never see the possibilities and/or because they’re simply too shy to act on it.

And now, think of all the famous media persons who obviously wouldn’t recognize talent even if it came out of nowhere and took away all their limelight.

Think of all the wealthy corporate leaders who got where they are by being uncompromising, cold as ice, playing the game and doing what’s best for the company no matter what.

Think of all the powerful politicians, all the Frank Underwood’s of the world, who got to where they are by lying, manipulating, and probably worse.
Really, luck has nothing to do with it. But being aware of our opportunities, and taking consistent action towards them has everything to do with it.

ACTION ITEM:

This week, take up learning something new. Something you've been wanting to get into, only you couldn't find the time (or whatever excuse you made for yourself).

Set aside 1/2 hour every night, monday through friday, for working on that thing only. Nothing else. This means, turn off your phone. No phone; no social media or other distractions. Just you and your new challenge.

Getting into this sort of habit will eventually prove to us that luck has nothing to do with it. -- And that practice, consistency, and focus are the keys to accomplishing pretty much anything.
* Yes, I know it’s originally a book. So are a lot of great movies.

Sunday, April 22, 2018

7 Goal Oriented Habits of Successful People

Many people wonder how they can become highly successful, not realizing that they hold within them everything they need to achieve all of the success they desire.
Successful people are where they are today because of their habits.  Habits determine 95% of a person’s behavior.
Everything that you are today, and everything that you will ever accomplish, is determined by the quality of the habits that you form.
By creating good habits and adopting a positive behavior, you too can become successful and live a prosperous life.

Successful People Maintain 7 Good Habits

For thousands of years, success in human life has been studied by great thinkers and philosophers.  I have personally studied the subject for more than 30 years.  What I have found is that the very best people have developed good habits. 
I have identified seven valuable habits that you need to develop if you want to perform at your very maximum in everything you do.

1) They are Goal Oriented


The first habit is to become goal oriented.

You need to be a habitual goal setter, and dedicate yourself to working from clear, written goals every day of your life, forming daily habits.  All highly successful people are intensely goal oriented. They know exactly what they want, they have it written down, they have written plans to accomplish it, and they both review and work on their plans as a daily routine.

I suggest you learn how to use the 80 20 rule to efficiently work toward achieving your goals.

2) They are Results Driven

The second habit of highly successful people is being results driven.
This is made up of two practices.
  1. The first is the practice of continuously learning so that you become better at what you do.
  2. The second practice is that of time management. This means setting very clear priorities on what you do and then concentrating single-mindedly on the most valuable use of your time.
All really successful people are intensely result-oriented.

3) They are Action Oriented


The third major habit you need to develop is that of continually taking action.

This is really the most important habit for material success.  It is the ability to get on with the job and get it done fast.  It is your ability to develop and maintain a sense of urgency, and a bias for action.  Fast tempo in whatever you do is essential to your success.
You need to overcome procrastination, push aside your fears and launch 100% toward the achievement of your most important goals.  The combination of goal orientation, result orientation and action orientation, in themselves, will virtually assure great success.
I highly suggest you learn to use SMART goals to list achievable targets that you can measure and track.

4) They are People Oriented


The fourth habit you need is people orientation.

This is where you put relationships in the center of your life.  This is your decision to cultivate within yourself the habits of patience, kindness, compassion, and understanding.  Virtually all of your happiness in life will come from your ability to get along well with other people.
The good news is that you can become a wonderful human being in your relationships with others when you decide to.
As Aristotle said, the only way that you can learn any habit is by practicing it on a regular basis.  The more you practice being a truly excellent person in your relationships with others, the more you will internalize those qualities and actually become that person.
Focusing on being more pleasant with the people in your life is a great technique to promote a positive thinking lifestyle. 

5) They are Health Conscious

The fifth habit that highly successful people develop is health consciousness.
This means that you must fastidiously watch your diet, and always eat the right foods in the right portions.  You must exercise on a regular basis, continually using every muscle and joint of your body to keep it limber and fit.  And finally, you must have good habits of rest and recreation that will enable you, in combination with diet and exercise, to live out your years in a healthy state.
Remember, your health is the most important single thing you have, and it is completely subject to the habits that you develop with regard to the way you live.

6) They are Honest

The sixth habit is that of honesty and integrity.
In the final analysis, the character you develop as you go through life is more important than virtually anything else.
Honesty means that you practice the “reality principle” in everything you do.  You are completely objective with yourself and with the world around you.  You set very clear values for yourself and you organize yourself around your values.  You develop a vision for yourself and then you live your life consistent with your highest ideals.  You never compromise your integrity or peace of mind for anyone or anything.
This attitude of honesty is critical to your enjoying all of the other good habits that you are developing.

7) They are Self-Disciplined

The seventh habit, and the one habit that guarantees all the others, is that of self-discipline.
Your ability to discipline yourself, to master yourself, to control yourself, is the most important single quality that you can develop as a person.  The habit of self-discipline goes hand in hand with success in every area of life.
If you would like some help staying motivated during your journey to the life of your dreams then checkout these inspirational success quotes. 
Every one of these habits, being goal oriented, results driven, action orientated, people orientated, health conscious, honest and self-disciplined can be developed.  You are where you are and what you are today because of your habits.  Your habits have been developing, mostly accidentally, from the time you were an infant.
Today you can take complete control over the shaping of your character and personality, and everything that happens to you in the future, by making the decision, right now, to find the definition of the habits that will lead you to great success.
And when you develop the same good habits possessed by other successful people,  you will enjoy having success in common.
Your future will become unlimited.