confidence


Four Simple Coaching Confidence Boosters 1

In today’s guest post coach and mountain guide Sarah Maliphant shares her thoughts and experience to offer:

"Four Simple Coaching Confidence Boosters" A guest post by Sarah Maliphant

Four Simple Coaching Confidence Boosters

by Sarah Maliphant

What’s made the greatest difference to your coaching confidence? Whether you’re just starting or have been coaching for years, the explorative nature of coaching takes us and our clients into new territory often, and that brings with it uncertainty, unknowns and potential for confidence dips.

First step therefore is to accept that moments of uncertainty are frequent and normal! They dissolve by continuing to explore, staying open, resourceful and curious; Sometimes by just noting that a particular area feels “uncertain,” acknowledging this to be the case and getting certain about what’s uncertain!

"Four Simple Coaching Confidence Boosters" A guest post by Sarah Maliphant. New Territory? Explore!

New Territory? Explore!

Behind that there is your own faith and experience of the coaching process. For me, my initial coaching confidence came from knowing how much I value being listened to, being asked questions with interest and without judgement or advice. I trust the process and love the underlying approach of coaching, that assumption that your client has the answer and simply values a bit of support to connect things up.

Conversely, my most challenging confidence-dips as a coach have been when I have a judgement on how I’m doing as a client with my own coach. Accepting that my little steps forward are often really, really mind bogglingly little usually releases that double bind… and in becoming more accepting of my own sustainable pace, I feel more confident in travelling at whatever pace my clients seek.

"Four Simple Coaching Confidence Boosters" A guest post by Sarah Maliphant - Mountain Metaphors

Mountain Metaphors: Half way through 8 hours of REALLY small steps to a summit in the Andes, June 2005

On an ongoing basis, the biggest confidence booster that comes to mind is: Ask your client

  • Not sure whether the pace is right? Ask!
  • Aware that a lot of coaching time is being used to repeat stories or detailed content? Ask if that’s how they want to spend their time, ask how and when to intrude
  • Not sure how to raise something? Ask how they’d like you to handle it
  • Wondering whether there’s more you could provide? Ask what else they’d like

The simplicity of this is rich: Asking is, after all, a fundamental of coaching. But there’s a deeper value too. By asking your client, you reinforce their belief in their ability to identify, communicate and respond to their own needs. Regardless of the specific outcome they are moving towards, this strengthens their connection to their own resourcefulness.

Does this make the conversation all about you, the coach? No, these are moments where you check in, create space for your client to do the same – and then you can continue your explorations together.

Our job is not to be awesomely amazing, but to help craft a space that is safe enough for our clients’ amazingness to blossom to their satisfaction. So relax, ask, and carry on coaching 🙂

About the author

Sarah MaliphantSarah Maliphant combines coaching and mountain guiding, a pairing she finds natural for open conversation and perspective. As well as one-one work, she leads mountain retreats in a peaceful the Brecon Beacons each month, with plenty of coaching, pampering and tasty home cooked meals – plus cake of course. The cake is a very important part of nurture in nature!
Website: http://www.more-to.org
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/moretomountains
Twitter: https://twitter.com/SarahMaliphant


My Weapon of Choice: Self-Confidence 1

In today’s guest post coach health coach Susan DiGiaimo shares some thoughts around confidence and how that is influencing her work.

"My Weapon of Choice: Self-Confidence" A guest post by Susan DiGiaimo

My Weapon of Choice: Self-Confidence

by Susan DiGiaimo

Everyday you have a choice to make things better, make better choices and do something for yourself. Some days are better than others. On those particular days when things do not go as well we usually end up beating up ourselves. I have learned from my own experiences that you just have to keep on going, thinking positively and moving forward.

Where did I gain this self-confidence? My mother was an extremely powerful role model for me. She had and still has a very strong work ethic. ”You can accomplish anything if you put your mind to it.” She also helped shape me into the woman I am today and I am thankful for that. Strong, transparent, empathetic, these are just some of the words that describe me.

I know now as a mother of three that, if you do not take the time to take care of yourself, you are not going to do a good job taking care of anyone else. Self-confidence is not something we inherit, we don’t learn it in school like Algebra, and it is definitely a challenge for some of us to gain. Ask me if I ever used Algebra again in my professional career, no. I would probably have benefited from a class about how to gain self-confidence.

Health self-esteem is like our armor against the challenges of the world. Individuals who know their strengths and weaknesses and feel good about themselves seem to have an easier time handling conflicts and resisting negative pressure. As we try, fail, try again, fail again, and then finally succeed, we develop ideas about our own capabilities. Now for kids self-esteem fluctuates as they grow. It is every evolving based on their experiences and perceptions.

I have a daughter who is nine years old. Her personality traits are being fun, loving, smart, determined, confident, and huggable. She didn’t always know why she was unique and what she was passionate about. She is constantly changing and growing like all of us.

We need to appreciate our children as they are for what they are. As kids grow and develop, their overall sense of self-confidence and personal worth grows and changes too. Self-confidence is about how confident we feel about our talents and abilities, not just how others perceive us. Children with self-confidence feel secure about themselves, regardless of how smart or successful others say they are.

I initiated a Kids Fitness Program first focusing on girls. We know that a girl’s self-confidence is based a great deal on how she looks and how others perceive her. Unfortunately society, media, our child’s access to computers and different technologies makes them even more vulnerable to not having good self-esteem.

I wanted to give girls the opportunity to be able to express and develop their key personality traits and recognize what makes them special or unique. I also wanted the girls to learn proper exercise technique and to understand what it means to live a healthy lifestyle. I believe this needs to start at a much earlier age and my classes start with kids in Kindergarten.

There are different exercises and activities for each age group and we know that because we are motivated by others. Competition is healthy and it let these girls come out of their shells, speak amongst their peers and also get stronger physically. The entire purpose is so when they continue on into Middle School or High School they are very aware of who they are and how they can put their best foot forward.

I know these kids absorb information like little sponges. Armed with Monkey tape, journals, and mats I set off to teach these girls how to do lunges, squats, mountain climbers, and push ups. No question the Monkey tape was a huge success. I place this so-called Monkey tape on the floor for proper placement of their feet for squats and lunges. By the last week they didn’t even need it.

Class was not easy. Even a seasoned athlete would have found it to be somewhat challenging. ”You are almost there, (now all the girls are counting down with me), 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 high fives everyone!” ”Give me five more and then we can get some water.” Most of the time everyone would give me five more. You are much stronger than you think. I tell this to my adult Boot Camp class as well. Mind over matter. They have to understand that they are not going to get it right the first time, but if they continue to try, they will succeed. Things happen by choice not by chance.

I am very proud of my girls in my first class and I look forward to seeing some of them again and watching them continue to gain more and more self-confidence. More importantly let your child’s personality shine, love them for who they are, not what you want them to be. I want them all to keep that sparkle in their eye and never let it fade.

Self-confidently Yours,

Susan

About the Susan DiGiaimo

First and foremost I am a mother of 3 wonderful kids. I learned and not until much later in life that your family is the most important thing above and beyond everything else. Another thing is if you are passionate about something then go after it, take the CAN out of CAN’T and make it happen. You have to love what you do first then nothing else matters. I have also been teaching Boot Camp at 5AM now for almost 10 years. I teach that class 4 days per week and other 2 I teach an Xtreme treadmill class and Xtreme Spin. I love the reward of seeing someone’s life change for the better. This is my passion, incorporating health and wellness into everyone.

Read Susan’s blog at FitForensics

Connect with Susan on Twitter at twitter.com/susandigiaimo

 

 


Is there any value to developing a coaching presence online?

Beverley Ireland-Symond shares her experience and knowledge in today’s guest post as she asks:

"Is there any value to developing a coaching presence online?" A guest post by Beverley Ireland-Symonds

Is there any value to developing a coaching presence online?

By Beverley Ireland-Symonds

One of the dilemmas for all coaches new or experienced is how they should market themselves and their coaching business.

Most coaches have business cards, some have leaflets or posters and some have a mixture of a website, a facebook page, a twitter account and/or a google plus account. It can be a challenge to know what is right for you and your coaching business.

I was recently asked whether it was essential as a coach to have a presence online, but it’s not one of those questions which I could give a simple yes or no to. There are a number of different issues that if you’re thinking about setting up some sort of presence or want to expand or improve on what you’re currently doing online that you should be thinking about.

What are some of the online options?

Having an online presence doesn’t mean you have to have a website. I’ve already mentioned facebook, twitter, a google plus account and I would add to that list Pinterest or LinkedIn. These are all places where you can promote yourself as an expert coach.

You can also write articles and post to article directories , write guest blogs and you can join relevant forums in your niche, post comments and ask and answer questions. None of these require you to have a website.

But if you do choose to go the website route there are different options for what you have. You can choose a very simple site that really acts as an information page about you and your coaching services encouraging visitors to the site to get in touch with you, or you can choose to do something a lot more comprehensive and build what’s known as an authority site – showcasing yours and others expertise.

So what are some of the advantages of having an online presence?

Increased reach

Having your own website is a great opportunity not only to showcase your own knowledge, experience and expertise but also those of your fellow coaches as Jen does on this site. This means you’re increasing your profile not only with potential customers but also with other professionals.

It’s easy to underestimate the power of potential online relationships. I’ve never met Jen, but I value the opportunity that she’s given me over the last three years to be a guest blogger and I guest blog for other people. I have a fellow hypnotherapist who regularly refers clients to me for confidence coaching that I met online, firstly through my website and then through Twitter.

In my case developing an online presence has also allowed me to extend my customer base and I’ve coached a number of clients in the United States who I would never have come across otherwise.

I have built my online presence by writing a lot of articles and posting to article directories, developing my own coaching site which is regularly updated and in the past I have been vocal on twitter.

Opportunities to share, educate and sell

Developing your own website or guest blogging allows you to share your experiences and what you’ve learnt. You can also take the opportunity to educate others through holding webinars, creating podcasts and creating resources. You can also build your own email list and send out regular newsletters.

And let’s not forget, it’s also an opportunity to sell. It may be that you only want to promote your services as a coach. I advertise an introductory coaching session and visitors can book a slot directly online. But you can also diversify and look at other opportunities to create income streams . Examples include writing your own coaching blog and earning money through advertising, writing your own coaching book related to your niche or developing an online coaching programme.

Of course it’s not for everyone. Some coaches want only to focus on their core business of coaching face to face or over the telephone and rely on word of mouth advertising. If that’s what works for you – great but if you want to try your hand at something different or you just want to extend the profile of your coaching services, why not explore further.

Pitfalls to look out for

Well of course there are pitfalls and I’ve experience many of them over the last three years. I didn’t really have a clue what I was doing when I started out building a website, having a twitter account etc so I had to learn everything as I went along. This means I didn’t plan and my website took on a life of its own and I found myself spending far too much time on it.

I built my own site but I didn’t have the skills initially and I often did silly things such as turning off the comments on my website so no one could discuss my articles. This means although I do actually have a lot of traffic (about 5000 visitors a month) – I don’t appear to have anyone engaging with my content.

I also don’t have testimonials on my site like many other coaches do and this is down to my niche. A lot of people want to keep quiet that they have used the services of a ‘Confidence Coach’. I just have to accept that this is the case and compare myself to others. It’s not a reflection on my ability as a coach.

Should you have a presence online?

I think this entirely depends on you, your particular niche, your marketing and business plan. No one should be compelled to have their own online presence – but if you decide it’s something that you want to do and it would be advantageous to you and your business then make sure you research how you might do it and avoid the mistakes I made and do some initial planning before you plunge in.

Summarised below are some of the key points of having an online presence

Pros

  • Opportunity to promote your services as a coach
  • Opportunity to generate discussions
  • Can help you to reach a wider audience
  • Can raise your personal profile an expert in a particular niche
  • Opportunity to create different revenue streams

Cons

  • Can be a challenge to identify and take advantage of the benefits
  • Can be time consuming
  • Can get out of hand if you’re not organised
  • Can act as a distraction if it’s not part of a proper marketing plan
  • Can be expensive if you don’t have the skills to run your own website

About the Author/Further Resources

Beverley Ireland-Symonds is an NLP Practitioner and NLP Coach, specialising in Confidence Coaching, working with clients both in the UK and America. She writes extensively on a range of issues including self esteem, confidence and personal development and having developed he own online coaching programme is currently editing her first book.

 


The two-minute confidence boost

Coach and leadership trainer Brian Lumsdon shares some of his experience, knowledge and a technique in today’s guest post.

"The two-minute confidence boost" A guest post by Brian Lumsdon

The two-minute confidence boost

By Brian Lumsdon

A few years ago I was blessed to study performance coaching with a brilliant trainer who I still model to this day and there was one aspect of his approach I enjoyed above everything else. On many occasions, after we covered a new topic thoroughly, he would smile wryly and say “Or you could just do this” and provide the group with a wonderfully skillful shortcut or fast-track to achieve the same outcome.

I’m always on the look out for similar approaches and so I was excited to discover Amy Cuddy’s insightful TED talk Your body language shapes who you are. This talk is in the top 30 most viewed Ted talks and Cuddy is listed number 1 in Time magazine’s Game Changers series.

In this talk Amy Cuddy shares some of her Harvard research where she shows how we can increase our levels of confidence significantly by simply adopting a power pose for just two minutes.

Swabs are taken before and after participants adopt their favourite power pose and analysis demonstrates an increase in levels of testosterone as a result. There is also a decrease in levels of cortisol (the stress hormone) and participants demonstrated higher levels of optimism in a subsequent games of chance.

Videos of participants were then shown to professional recruiters, who highlighted those who had adopted the two-minute power pose as more confident and credible candidates. So following this process also influences the perception other people have of us.

Over the last few weeks I have adapted my own power pose, a combination of two well known sports stars and myself from a specific event where I felt particularly confident. I have also added a phrase I find particularly resourceful that I will repeat during these day minutes.

After practising every day and becoming comfortable with recreating a state of confidence, I now use this technique whenever I feel the additional boost of confidence will be really useful.

There are still times in my work with successful leaders and managers when I’m surprised by some revealing they are not be as confident as they may first appear. And so during our work together achieving their goals I will often find myself saying “And you can also do this!”

About the Author/Further Resources

Brian Lumsdon is a leadership trainer and coach with TwentyOne Leadership and has created lasting change in diverse organisations over the last 15 years.

Brian specialises in creating high-performing coaching cultures and helping leaders connect employees to their vision and values. You can contact Brian via e-mail (br***@*****************ip.com) or connect via LinkedIn.

 


Secrets of Coaching Confidence

Richard Nugent shares his thoughts and expertise in today’s guest post about:

A guest post by Richard Nugent

Secrets of Coaching Confidence.

(Adapted from an article written for Fenman Training’s ‘Coach the Coach’)

by Richard Nugent

I’d like you to consider a big paradigm shift from the very beginning of this article – this is that confidence is just a state. It’s not something we have or haven’t got, it’s something you do or don’t do. ‘States’ are changes in chemical and electrical activity in the body caused by alterations in focus or physiology. Many coaches, leaders and managers now understand that by changing what they are paying attention to on the inside or by getting them to move or even hold themselves differently, they can alter their ‘emotional’ state.

While we believe that top people just have it, confidence is a specific emotional state that is alien to many people in many situations. Whether this is as a result of culture (national, local or organisational), upbringing, experience or self-perception, it is clear that for many people the feeling of absolute confidence is felt in only very specific circumstances. In fact the chemical reactions experienced at these isolated times can be recreated in any context, in other words you easily train your self to be more confident more of the time.

The Physiology of Confidence

Who is the most confident person that you know? How do you know that they are confident? How would somebody who has just met them know? People who are seen as ‘confident’ will demonstrate similar characteristics, most of which can easily be replicated by anyone.

Typical Physiological Characteristics of Confidence
  • Straight posture
  • Postive movements (whether attacking or defending)
  • Even breath
  • Firm, positive gestures
  • Steadiness of vocal tone

Being able to copy these characteristics allows more than a simple ‘mimicking’ of confidence. When anyone regularly adopts the physiology of confidence, they are encouraging their body to trigger confidence chemicals and electrical activity to stimulate a genuine state of confidence.

It’s important to remember that many people who are perceived as confident by others don’t always feel that way on the inside. Those who master confidence maintain their focus and regularly adopt the physiology of confidence, which in turn develops their confidence further.

It is vital to remember the important part that the body plays in ‘confidence’ (and indeed any state). As Dr. Candice Pert (‘Molecules of Emotion’ (Pocket Books ISBN: 0671033972, Amazon UK link), the pioneering neuroscientist highlighted, “the brain is located within and throughout the body”. In other words, our memory is quite literally in the muscle. When you discover what your own confidence physiology is, you will begin to access this state increasingly easily.

The ‘Focus’ of Confidence

So, it’s easy to see what confident people do on the outside, what about what happens on the inside? What sets these self-assured people apart from those who doubt themselves? We’ve known for some time now that internal dialogue plays a vital part in our state and how we perceive ourselves at any time. Many people, however, still allow these negative internal dialogues to continue. Their focus that is based on regular dialogue of ‘why do I always choke in the big meetings?’, ‘why do I always do this wrong?’, I’ll never be good enough to get promoted?’.

The more they repeat these (and other) low quality questions and statements, the more they drive doubt and anxiety into their neurology.

What about the focus of those who ‘have’ confidence? What do they know, do or say that allows that to operate more often from this much more resourceful state? On a fundamental level the internal dialogue will be more positive, encouraging and assured. For example ‘whatever level I present to, I’ll always adapt’ is an example of one person’s internal dialogue I’ve worked with. This wasn’t some forced positive self-talk, it was simply something that he has now said to himself so often that it became a belief.

Another useful angle to explore is that the focus of main internal representational systems (senses) changes slightly when focusing on confidence or the lack of it in certain situations. By identifying what these differences it can be relatively simple to help your people alter their strategies and increase their chances of success.

When I was first introduced to this concept, I asked a client to focus on a situation he lacked confidence about and notice his internal representations. He quickly found himself running a whole load of negative ‘strategies’. His internal pictures were all of the situation going badly. He was performing poorly and others were showing a much higher level of ability. His internal dialogue had switched to negative and critical, he was hearing himself complain, and imagining his manager pointing out his weaknesses. Finally he had a significant knot in his stomach – no surprise bearing in mind his visual and auditory focus!

I then had him focus on a future experience that he had full confidence in. Within seconds his internal picture had changed. As well as the internal pictures now showing success and the whole scenario going well, they were also brighter and clearer; mentally it was a sunny day! The auditory tape had changed too; now his internal dialogue was positive and supportive as was the imagined language of those around him. Finally, and most interestingly for me, the knot had moved. Rather than the intense feeling in his stomach, it was now an equally intense feeling in his chest – the same one he gets whenever he is excited!

This client found his key focus differences for fear and excitement and confident and unconfident. The differences between the two will vary in individual from person to person what remains the same is our (and their) ability to change the focus.

Try this experiment. It will be most effective if you can familiarise yourself with the questions, then close your eyes when doing each part of the exploration.

Think of an event in the future you feel less than confident about. Really associate into it, see it through your own eyes, as if it were happening now.

  • Notice what the pictures are like.
  • Are they moving or still?
  • How successful are you seeing yourself being?
  • What are the colours, contrast and brightness like?

 

  • Now focus on the sounds.
  • What kinds of things are you hearing, are they supportive or not?
  • Notice the volume and pitch of what you can hear.
  • Also notice where the sounds are coming from.

 

  • Finally take notice of what feelings this has generated in you.
  • Are they familiar?
  • What would you label them as?
  • Where specifically in the body are they?
  • Are they moving or still? Do they have a shape?

Having noticed the pictures, sounds and feelings that you were focussing on change your focus completely for a moment before moving onto the second part. Stand up and move around, even sitting in a different position will help. When you’ve shaken off the feeling of unconfident, then you’re ready to move on the next part.

Now think of an event in the future you feel supremely confident about. Again associate into it, see it through your own eyes, as if it were happening now.

  • Now notice what the pictures are like.
  • Are they moving or still?
  • How successful are you seeing yourself being?
  • What are the colours, contrast and brightness like?

 

  • Again move onto the sounds.
  • What kinds of things are you hearing, are they supportive now?
  • Notice the volume and pitch of what you can hear.
  • Also notice where the sounds are coming from.

 

  • Now take notice of what feelings this has generated in you.
  • Are they familiar?
  • What would you label them as?
  • Where specifically in the body are they?
  • Are they moving or still? Do they have a shape?

This can be an extraordinarily useful and powerful tool to access your confidence more regularly. Over time this process becomes more and more natural, even automatic allowing us to instantly access our confidence.

Is that it?

Surely those people who have suffered from neglect or criticism over a sustained period of time can’t simply ‘become’ confident by standing straighter or telling themselves how wonderful they are? Well maybe. The assumption that confidence can’t be changed or improved ‘that easily’ comes from the assumption that it is some kind of deep rooted belief. This takes us back to our starting point. Confidence is certainly affected by our beliefs – however confidence itself is a state.

Surely then it’s a long lasting embedded ‘state’? Well there is no such thing, states are always changing, electrical and chemical activity is constantly taking place in our body. It makes sense to describe states as “emergent properties” of our self-organising brains because they are always in a state of flux (Grigsby and Stevens, Neurodynamics of Personality The Guilford Press 2000). This naturally means that to remain in a state of ‘unconfident’ for more than even a few minutes we must repeat and maintain the focus and physiology that is helping us into that state. Anyone can break these patterns by simply changing our physiology or focus.

An added advantage is that it’s often unnecessary to even explore what is causing the lack of confidence. Doing so would merely reinforce feelings of inadequacy. Instead, focus on practicing the focus and physiology of the state of confidence which when mastered, can change lives forever.

About the Author/Further Resources

Richard is the M.D. of Twenty One Leadership and has coached talented people from the fields of sport and business for the last decade. Clients have credited him with everything from million pound transfers to the creation of new market leading organisations. The return on investment from his programmes stretches into the millions of Pounds, Euros and Dollars.


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.