How to Find Self Confidence and Develop Motivation Online
Posted: Tuesday, February 02, 2010
by Ash Rehn
Forward Therapy
Have you ever decided to
make a major change in your life, a change that you feel totally committed to
making, only to find after a few weeks, days or perhaps only hours, all your
good intentions have been scuttled and you are back to where you were?
Perhaps you have made a New
Years Resolution and decided to stop smoking, limit drinking or take up a new
fitness routine? Maybe you took a decision to look for new job or rewrite your
CV or ask a certain special person out on a date?
Many people have had, at
various times, goals that they have struggled to achieve or plans that appeared
to come to nothing. When I ask people what holds them back in life, they often
tell me it is a lack of confidence, or shyness or not having ‘self esteem’ or
something similar.
So what can you do if the
changes you want to make just seem too overwhelming?
Research
conducted by the University
of Hertfordshire shows that keeping a diary, breaking up goals into smaller
steps, rewarding yourself and focusing on your success can all contribute to
making plans and goals come to fruition.
Another
factor is telling others about these resolutions. This is something that counsellors
and therapists can confirm often works wonders. Hearing ourselves speak about
what we are doing and having an audience to our plans and dreams can be like
talking them into existence. It is a very powerful strategy in making change!
But how easy is it to start
sharing our plans or goals with the people in our lives, especially when
confidence seems in short supply?
Counsellors and therapists
are in a unique position. We expect the people who consult with us to be
somewhat vulnerable, stuck or lost. So our professional responsibility to
maintain confidentiality can provide just enough of a lift to confidence to
encourage people to share their stories.
Modern technology and the
Internet have taken this one step further. Now it is possible to meet with a
counsellor online in comfort and privacy. For many people, online counselling
is easier and requires less confidence than meeting with a counsellor or
therapist in person. For example, webcam counselling sessions are a lot simpler
to attend because you don’t need to travel to an office, park the car or sit in
a waiting room! Instant messaging provides a higher level of privacy with the
benefit of a written record of the session. Similarly, email counselling allows
you to write in your own time. Motivation can come and go, so it can be helpful
to write when it is at its highest.
Confidence grows when we are
encouraged to talk about what we want and supported to believe changes are
possible. Online counselling is effective because no matter how much shyness or
how little confidence is around, you can make a start. And that’s the beginning
of change.
Ash Rehn is an online
counsellor and therapist with over 20 years experience in counselling. He
specialises in motivation & confidence, relationship issues, sexuality and
addiction. His Forward Therapy online counselling practice is based at www.forwardtherapy.com
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