Colin Clerkin


What Shape is your Confidence: taking these simple steps can boost your confidence

In this weeks guest post, coach and psychologist, Colin Clerkin shares some thoughts about confidence. Could these be steps you use personally or with clients?

What Shape is your Confidence: taking these simple steps can boost your confidence

by Colin Clerkin

What Shape is your Confidence: taking these simple steps can boost your confidence

When you think about confidence, what does it mean to you? It is an attitude, a belief, a sense of assuredness that permeates your being and allows you to feel that you can achieve anything. A confident you can nail that presentation, make that sale, ask for that raise.

But an un-confident you… now, that is a very different story, is it not? Self-doubt, uncertainty, anxiety; an inability to function that often makes little sense to you because you know you have the ability, but the self-belief is just not there when you need it.

There are many things that we can learn to try to address our lack of confidence. Coaches and psychologists can help with psycho-educational training that looks at assertiveness, stress management courses, social skills training, etc. All of these can make a positive difference to how you perceive a situation and your response to it, but I would like to introduce another, simple idea, one that approaches the problem at a physical level.

I would like you to consider how your body shape reflects your inner state — and then recognise how you can start to overcome problems with confidence by actively, physically, making the changes I will introduce to you in this article.

Lack of confidence has a “shape”

When we are NOT confident, we all know that it shows. The people around us can tell. For example, the un-confident me will tend to close in on myself: my shoulders droop; my head drops; my eye contact becomes poor. I might rub my hands, or chew my lip, or yawn even though I am not tired. All of this occurs unconsciously in response to some perceived threatening situation. This is not threatening in the sense that my physical well-being is at risk, but threatening to my self-esteem and my sense of competence as a person.

So, let’s begin to address this by looking at how adjusting the frame of the body can lead us to positive change in how we feel in certain situations, and we can learn to use body posture as a priming cue for confidence.

Body posture creates the scaffolding upon which we can hang positive imagery to help shift our perceptions of ourselves — if we can learn to project our confident shape onto our body framework, we can use this to start altering our response to challenges to our confidence.

By paying attention to and altering our body posture in line with our desired functioning, and building onto this scaffold, we can cue associated desired, confident responses.

But where do we find “our confident shape”?

The first place to look is in our own experience. Think back to a time when you did feel confident. Spend a minute or two recalling that experience; what it felt like and, importantly, how you held yourself at the time. Notice how your shoulders were set strongly, your head up. Felt good, didn’t it? This is the core of the confident image that I want you to project onto the body scaffold I described above.

If your life experience has not been of confidence previously, then take some time to think about someone that you admire whom you consider to be supremely and positively confident. They can be a real person or someone from fiction; it does not matter. But notice what it is about their physical presentation that causes you to perceive them as confident. Notice how they hold themselves, the way they meet the gaze of the person they are speaking to, or their voice tone when they speak. Imagine this confident posture projected onto your own frame and pay attention to where in your body you first notice the spark of that feeling as it takes hold.

Breath in deeply and focus on that part of your body where you feel that confidence once again. With each deep breathe in, allow yourself to experience that confidence growing. Physically allow your body to mirror the posture of that confident you of old or that admired role model. Feel the shape of confidence as it takes hold of your frame and inhabit it.

Now realise what you have just achieved

With a few simple deep breaths and the application of a memory from another time or an impression of another’s poise to your current body posture, you have boosted your own confidence. It may only be by a matter of degrees this first time, but imagine how, by practicing this technique regularly, you can enhance this experience and learn to apply it readily at those times in your day-to-day life where previously you have felt your confidence escape you.

Learn to do this and you will soon see how your confidence can take on this new and exciting positive shape.

About the author

Dr Colin Clerkin is a psychologist and coach based in Chester, in the North West of England. Colin has been involved in helping people tackle challenges in their lives for 20 years, initially as a clinical psychologist and, over the past three years, as both a personal and a parent coach.After his own experiences with cancer in recent years, he has also been inspired to coach cancer survivors as they look to adjust to life after cancer.

He launched Mirror Coaching in 2010, and provides face-to-face or Skype-based coaching to parents, individuals and small business owners. He is currently creating an on-line coaching programme to help people in the early stages of setting up their coaching and therapy practices.


What would you see as the credits roll …? 4

In this weeks Friday guest post Dr Colin Clerkin shares a technique he likes to use and invites you to add your comments.

What would you see as the credits roll …?

by Dr Colin Clerkin

Reading recent posts on the Coaching Confidence blog, including Jen’s post Once Upon a Time and Frederique Murphy’s similarly-titled Once Upon a Time …!, I was prompted to think about the power of story telling within coaching and how, when you can help a client create their own story of how they want their life to be, you are creating a powerful vision that then allows you and your client to make the changes that are needed to enable them to begin to bring this story to life.

We all know of the importance of creating a strong vision with our clients, and I am sure we all have various techniques we use to achieve this. I thought today I would share with you one method I like to use, especially with young people or with clients who are perhaps struggling to identify their ultimate goals for coaching. I’d welcome your thoughts or comments on it, as I am constantly looking at how I can tweak my practice to make it even better.

The “Future Movie” concept is one I learned many moons ago within my therapy practice when I attended a workshop with Dr Ricky Greenwald, a child trauma expert and EMDR practitioner from New York. It was presented as a therapeutic technique and I used it often when I worked with children and families with problems. Although I’ve altered it a little over time to suit my coaching clientele, the basic elements remain. Using some EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing) techniques can enhance the power of the vision, but they are not a necessity for it still to be effective.

As I am teasing out with clients their goals and what they want to achieve through coaching, I find that some clients struggle to imagine how things might be different in the future – they have ideas of what they want to change, perhaps, but they find it difficult to connect with how their world might be different if they make those changes. The possibility of change appeals but they may find it hard to believe that they can make changes that will have any significant impact on their world.

After discussing the power they have within them to make a difference to their lives, I then sometimes introduce them to their “Future Movie”. I ask them to let their imagination flow as they listen to what I outline next, perhaps picturing what I describe projected onto the wall in front of them and then I begin to tell them a story that goes like this: “Ten years from today (or five or whatever time frame you feel is relevant to your client), I arrive home after a long day, just wanting to sit and unwind for a bit, so I grab something to eat and settle down to watch a movie. I turn to the TV listings and see that “The (Client’s Name) Story” is just about to start. I think to myself, “Hey, I knew them X years ago … I wonder how their story has developed since then?” The movie starts and I become totally absorbed in this movie, feeling all the ups and downs and cheering the hero on as they soar to achieve all they aspire to. As the credits roll, I think to myself “Wow, they really did it … they told me all those years ago that this is what they wanted, and now there it is … what an inspiring movie!”

I then ask the client to describe to me what they are seeing on the “screen” as the credits are rolling on this movie, to describe the final image, in as much detail as they can, tapping into the brightness and colour, what they feel inside, who else is there with them, describing in detail what this scene means to them as it relates to their success, what their thoughts are as they experience this positive outcome, and, most especially, what they are saying to themselves at that point in time.

I will delve deeper into these points with the client, as getting as clear a vision that connects to the successful culmination of this phase of their story is important. Clients need to be able to emotionally connect with this vision and flesh out what it is their aspirations and goal-setting can ultimately achieve. When they have been able to do this, it is much easier for them to identify the interim goals that they need to set and work towards that will take them closer to their ultimate vision of their future. Without this clear vision, I find that some clients, especially my younger clients, do struggle to identify those critical steps that they need to take within their goal-setting practice to move forward with purpose and energy.

I believe that a goal without a thought-through end-result is little more than a vague “wouldn’t it be nice if …” wish-list, so this technique helps clients focus and be clear about what their goals are and why they are important to them. As I’ve said, it can be particularly effective with young clients (I work with adolescents and adults in my practice), but it is a tool that can be useful whatever your client’s age or background, whether they are personal development coaching clients wanting to look at their personal lives or business coaching clients, trying to visualise how their business or careers can develop going forward.

And it is another example of the power of story-telling in coaching; only this time, you help your client put themselves smack bang in the starring role!

About the Author/Further Resources

Colin HeadshotDr Colin Clerkin is a psychologist and coach based in Chester, in the North West of England. Colin has been involved in helping people tackle challenges in their lives for almost 20 years, initially as a clinical psychologist and, over the past three years, as a personal development coach too. He launched Mirror Coaching earlier this year, and provides face-to-face or Skype-based coaching to parents, individuals and small business owners. After his own experiences with cancer in recent years, he has also been inspired to coach cancer survivors as they look to adjust to life after cancer.