Friday, September 22, 2017

Respect Yourself: How to Communicate with Confidence

It can be hard to respect yourself if you are insecure or afraid. These assertiveness tools will help you build self-respect and confidence.If you don’t respect yourself, neither will other people. How are you supposed to feel confident, assertive and develop self-esteem if you don’t show yourself some respect? Others may take advantage of you, people can be intimidating or situations you encounter may be so overwhelming it makes it hard to respect yourself. I’ve got three simple tools that can help you feel more confident communicating with others.

As a recovering people-pleaser, I get it, it’s scary to speak up and set some boundaries.”What if someone gets mad at me? What if they don’t like me anymore?” I used to let these thoughts interfere with my life and they weren’t true. These limiting beliefs and insecure thoughts may be holding you back too. We fear that others will leave us or get mad at us, the truth is people who don’t stick around when you start to respect yourself are the people that no longer deserve your time or attention.

Respect Yourself and Others will too

In my years of research on confidence and communication, I found that people respect you more when you are assertive, set boundaries and prioritize your self-care.  They realize that your time is valuable and you are important when you show them it is. You have to teach people how to treat you and when you express yourself with confidence they will begin to change too.

What about the people who get mad when you don’t give in? Sadly, some people will be disrespectful to you, but in my experience, those were the people who weren’t healthy for me in the first place. You may have some people like this in your life too, they may invalidate you and make you feel unworthy, they are also the ones that likely reinforced your insecurity around speaking up for yourself in the first place. Distance yourself from these people.

How to Respect Yourself with Difficult People

Whether you are texting or talking in person, dealing with a stranger or a family member, these steps will help you communicate with confidence. You’ll be less anxious before and after your conversation while asking for what you want and need clearly and effectively. Below are the steps to follow in almost any situation before you say a word. You’ll feel more confident in what you have to say and how you say it.

  1.  Identify your emotions. What are you feeling? The moment you name your emotion, the frontal cortex of your brain, the area where problem-solving takes place, begins to turn on. When we avoid or push away our emotions we get stuck in the emotional center of the brain, leading to more intense feelings and lack of control. Try it, say out loud what you are feeling, and allow your mind to do what is natural. When you’re clear about what you’re feeling, you’ll speak with more confidence.
    2. Validate your emotions. Say your boss embarrassed you in a meeting at work, you want to storm into his office or fire off an email to let him know he’s a jerk and he can’t talk to you like that again. Go back to what your emotions are telling you “I’m mad and embarrassed” and, you still need a job. So does that mean you just push it away? Not at all, it means you validate why the emotion is occurring in the first place, your boss was mean to you. Now, ask yourself what do you want to change, how do you want to feel instead?  Take a minute to honor your emotions and identify what you want to feel so that you can get clear on what you want to focus on when you communicate.
    3. Realize your goal. Do you want your boss to respect you more in the office, say sorry or do you want to find out what’s going on, why is he treating you like this? You’ve got to have a goal before you say or type a word so that you feel more confident when you are communicating. You may not know exactly what to say or how to say it, but if you get clear on what the desired outcome is your brain will focus on this, making you less distracted by others reactions or comments. The goal could be to feel heard, to maintain or build a more positive relationship, to get what you want or need from someone, or ask for help.

So respect yourself more this week, when you feel an emotion come up, honor it and see why it’s hanging around. The more you tune in and realize your needs, the more confident and in control, you will become.





Self Esteem Feeds

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