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Myth of confidence -
2
This article is a sequel to Myth
of confidence -1 (see below)
It is important that you read the previous one before you
read the second part.
Many of us tend to believe that to be
able to do something, to be able to accomplish and achieve,
we need to have high self confidence.
Just few week back Geniekids decided to
make some films on parenting and we decided to shoot 'how
children work". Four of our facilitators were supposed to
conduct a session, in front of the lights and cameras, with
children.
Now we all know that it takes quite a
bit of courage to be in front of the camera. Couple of our
facilitators were extremely nervous and not confident of
doing a session in front of the camera. So much so, that on
the day of the shoot, one of the facilitator asked me in the
morning, "can I back out? Is there some way I not do this?"
What finally happened was that in spite
of being not at all confident, they went ahead and did it
and actually did quite a good job of it. Not only they did
it well, but just after doing it they also became, suddenly,
very confident of doing a session in front of the camera.
So what happened to our belief that we
need confidence, as a prerequisite to be able to do
something well? I guess, not only the above example, but if
we all look into our past, we will find examples of when we
went ahead and accomplished something in spite of being not
at all confident about it.
So is confidence not necessary to be
able to do something or do it well?
I am not trying to say that confidence
will not help. If I have confidence, than it is much easier
for me to do something - no doubt about that. But confidence
is not a pre-condition. I can be not confident and still go
ahead and do it - and thats how sometimes we operate.
Which means there much be something
else that must be helping us in doing things which we are
nervous or not confident about. So what is this something
that helps us take this leap of courage? Where does this
"let me try" come from?
To me this comes from
self belief.
A belief that if I try I might just succeed. A belief, if
present, will make us go ahead and attempt and if absent,
will make us find excuses not to try!
Which means that this self belief
is far bigger than self confidence. Or rather, self
confidence is coming out of being able to do something,
which came out of self belief. Obviously the more I do, and
meet success, the more confident I get. But the starting
point, the initial push came from self belief. Just an
example here - infants have little self confidence that they
will be able to walk. In fact they meet with more failures
than successes, while trying to do so. But, they have a huge
self belief that drives them, a conviction that they can do
it.
So self confidence becomes more of a
function of my abilities and my recent experience with
exercising these abilities. For example, the newspaper wrote
after Indian cricket team lost first few matches against
west-Indies, that "Indian team is low on confidence". No
nobody really doubts the capability set of the team (just
like I had no doubt about the ability of my facilitators to
take session in front of the camera).
So what made confidence low? Is
confidence constant or wavering? What is then more
permanent? What could make the team still win in spite of
having low confidence? Should I focus on building confidence
or something else?
Somewhere the self belief makes all the
difference. What I am trying to say is "My being able to
do or not do things is not
a function of confidence but
a function of omnipresent, more permanent and more pervasive
self belief.
One more important aspect here -
sometimes we do not have the confidence, but somebody pushes
us, somebody who inspires us, somebody who believes in us.
Indirectly somebody instills or builds that self belief in
us.
Does that mean that our most important role as parents is to
instill that self belief in our child?
A belief that says, "success or failure, just go ahead and
do what you want to do". Which means in some ways, specially
as a child, I start believing in myself, when others around
me start believing in me.
Are we too much behind confidence
building? Do we actually show the belief in the child rather
than just pushing the child. So instead of egging the child
by something like "go - go - go - do - it". Can we not turn
to the child and, from deep inside us, tell the child
genuinely - "yes, you can do it, I am sure you can do it, I
believe you can do it.
So self confidence becomes more of a
self generative process: Out of my self belief - I do it -
Since I am able to do it - I feel more confident and since I
feel more confident - I do it better next time and I get
more confident and so on. So the seed of self belief was all
important.
But what happens when, based on my self
belief, I go ahead and try and FAIL! Obviously my confidence
would be even lower - or in negative. Which means to try
again, I need more of self belief. How do I get that?
More on this later.
By Ratnesh & Aditi Mathur
For
www.geniekids.com
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