Six Ways to Come Back to Confidence | The BridgeMaker |
Six Ways to Come Back to Confidence Posted: 05 Jul 2010 04:21 AM PDT
Article written by Alex Blackwell. Connect with me on Facebook. I can feel my self-confidence begin to drop days before the freefall. Doubt creeps in and surrounds everything I do. Routine decisions become challenging and my anxiety soars to the point my body feels it can't endure the pressure. The signs of a self-confidence plunge are unmistakable: thoughts of unworthiness, persistent sweating and interrupted sleep all shout that my life is about to get off track. When the freefall finally happens I feel powerless to stop it. It sweeps me away and takes me to a desperate, lonely place. The way back to confidence can sometimes seem impossible. Looking from the outside, it appears I have everything I need. I have a wonderful family, my health is the best it has ever been and money is not an issue (more would be nice, of course). Living from the inside, I know there's a different story. Under attackDemons still roam and my shame is not quite healed. Today is my 48th birthday and I thought I would be in a different place by now and my confidence fully restored. But it doesn't work that way. My self-confidence is still under attack. The good thing is at least now I see the enemy coming. The freefall begins when I think I should receive something without having to ask for it. This thought was born several decades ago. I am an adult child of an alcoholic mother. Even though the disease has claimed her, the damage still exists in me; sitting there unclaimed and waiting for me to either destroy it or be destroyed by it. Maybe the right answer is to simply acknowledge it. When I was young I thought if I did everything perfectly then my mother would tell me she loved me without any prompting. I would look for the words, expect to hear them and then feel the fall begin to happen when she made a difference choice. I can still see that little boy standing alone and not understanding why. These wounds still cut deep today. If I think I should receive recognition or if my wife pulls away because of a distracting situation, I panic. I begin to see my world in just one color and my rational mind is overtaken by insecurity and self doubt. My time is spent checking for any sign that what I want to happen is about to happen. I overanalyze remarks and dissect emails hoping to find a coded message of appreciation. I long for my wife's touch even though she is right there holding my hand the whole time. I fidget and find myself unable to relax because my energy is focused on manifesting what I didn't receive as a child. When these things happen, the fall is complete. My self-confidence has crashed. Six ways to come back to confidenceOne of the gifts from growing older is we get to experience our personal challenges more often. Because of this, we can find ways to overcome them if we make the attempt. I have spent the better part of the last 48 years coping with the challenge to remain confident. Just as I can see the fall in confidence begin to happen days before it arrives, I'm also able to see the way back to confidence a litter sooner and a little clearer now. When I fall, I rely on what I'm still learning to help me come back to confidence.
My birthday wishLater today Mary Beth will remove my birthday cake from the freezer. She ordered it last week to make sure it arrived before the bakery closed for the Independence Day holiday. The cake will need to thaw before the candles are placed on it and I make my birthday wish. When it is time, I will close my eyes and consider all that has happened and what's to come before blowing out the candles. I will wish my children always see their talent, beauty and worth. I will wish them a peace I'm just now beginning to taste. I will wish my wife continues to find her passion and for the healing she deserves. I will wish my brother and sister realize how much I love them. Sometimes it hard showing it because I connect them to a time I pretend never existed. Like me, they were innocent bystanders. And like me, it wasn't their fault. I will wish them peace, too. I will wish my father embraces the time he has left without regret and with the confidence to enjoy his life. I will wish he knows this is his time to do whatever his heart desires. I will wish my mother finds the forgiveness that is waiting for her. I will wish for her soul to move into the light and to know, once and for all, that everything will be alright. I will wish for all of these things, but I will save the last wish for me. I will wish for the awareness to know I am loved and appreciated without having to ask; I will wish for the freefalls to be shorter and further apart and I will wish to come back to confidence so the little boy never has to be alone again. Browse all articles | Read 30 True Things You Need to Know Now | Join The BridgeMaker on Facebook |
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