1234ssdf - Untitled

1234ssdf - Untitled

More Posts from 1234ssdf and Others

1 year ago
Fearless Social Confidence: Strategies To Live Without Fear, Speak Without Insecurity, Beat Social Anxiety,
Fearless Social Confidence: Strategies To Live Without Fear, Speak Without Insecurity, Beat Social Anxiety,

Fearless Social Confidence: Strategies to Live Without Fear, Speak Without Insecurity, Beat Social Anxiety, and Stop Caring What Others Think - Patrick King book notes

Socially confident people:

expect to be accepted. When they meet strangers, they expect to make a good impression. They never approach situations thinking, “What if they don’t like me?” Instead they think, “I hope I like them.”

evaluate themselves positively. Socially confident people are encouraging, positive, and accepting of themselves. They give themselves leeway not to be perfect and don’t beat themselves up too harshly when they are not.

feel comfortable around superiors. Socially confident people feel comfortable because they don’t feel threatened, or that their flaws and vulnerabilities will be highlighted by the other person’s qualities.

With a lack of social confidence, you are usually choosing the thought that is cruelest to yourself.

when navy SEALs recognize that they are feeling overwhelmed, they regain control by focusing on their breath—breathing in for four seconds, holding for four seconds, and then out for four seconds, and repeating until you can feel your heart rate slow down and normalize.

Core beliefs: 

Steps in a thought diary entry can be arranged in the easy-to-remember A-C-B format—

Activating Event. Note down the event/ situation. This is simply the origin point of your emotional change. It’s whatever caused your emotional status to change from calm to agitation (a memory, a song, etc).

Consequences. In this step you identify the specific emotions and sensations that arose. These could be simple feeling words— “anxious,” “unhappy,” “sickened,” “panicky,” “melancholy,” “confused,” and so forth.

Beliefs. This is where the action begins. How do you link the activating event with the consequences? What unconscious narrative or story about yourself was told to achieve the consequence? (“What was I thinking?”  “What was going through my head when this happened?”  “What’s wrong with that?”“What does this all mean?”  “What does it reveal about me?”)

Now you’ve gotten to the bottom of your situation and figured out what your core beliefs are.

The first step is writing down one of the core beliefs you’ve just uncovered. Ask yourself what experiences you’ve had that prove your core belief wasn’t always true. Generate as many experiences as you can and be very specific about what happened.

Write down the core belief you’re examining.  Think of ways that you can put that belief to the test. These are actual tasks that you can perform.  Then, write down what you expect or predict will happen after conducting these tasks if your core belief was true.  Perform the tasks.  Write down what really happened after you completed your task.  Compare and contrast your predictions with what actually happened. Finally, document what you learned from the task and come up with a new, more reasonable core belief that goes in line with your discoveries.

Bushman’s results imply that sometimes the best course of action after being provoked to anger is to just sit quietly and let it pass.

There’s a direct link between social anxiety and negativity. A 2016 Australian research study showed that “elevated social anxiety vulnerability is characterized only by facilitated attentional engagement with socially negative information.” Obsessing over negative details—including by constantly talking about one’s problems—only reinforces one’s social fears and does nothing to inspire real confidence in a social setting.

Personalization is the mother of guilt. In the cognitive distortion of personalizing, you feel responsible for events that cannot conceivably be your fault. While it is admirable to take responsibility for your actions, there are things completely out of your control: the subway schedule, other people’s actions, and a million day-to-day factors.

Common cues of overgeneralization are “always” and “never.” When starting a sentence or a thought with “always” or “never,” consider whether you have the experience or evidence to back up the statement.

Other people aren't only what they are showing to the world. Most people put on a good show. But do you really know what might be going on in their private life? Take comfort from the fact that while there will be many people who are better at certain things than you are, there are also most certainly things that you will be better at.

If you are self-conscious and worried that people will judge you if you say something stupid or “off,” there's an easy workaround to that. The best approach is simple preparation. Create answers to predictable questions and conversations. Run that mental videotape in your mind about your past 10, 20, or 30 social conversations. I guarantee they are not all that different from each other.

Figure out the general questions that people will ask and the topics that will come up in normal conversation and be prepared with story-answers. For example, How was your weekend? What are you doing this weekend? How was your day? What do you do for work?

How can we ease ourselves into social confidence little by little? 

List the social situations you avoid. Ask yourself what kinds of gatherings or circumstances you steer clear of and write them all down in a list. Your list should include both physical situations—parties, family gatherings, work presentations, and so forth—and personal experiences that you don’t want to face.

Give each situation a SUDS level from 0 to 100.

Plan your goals.

Build your goal stepladder. You’ve planned a goal and have decided to start work. Remember, situational exposure is a bit-by-bit process.

1 year ago
Big Is Beautiful

Big is beautiful

8 months ago
1234ssdf - Untitled
6 months ago
1234ssdf - Untitled
1 year ago
Naked Milf...

naked milf...

1 year ago

PAWS!

Double tap to high five the beans

  • tarheelsman
    tarheelsman liked this · 1 month ago
  • steelerfan36
    steelerfan36 liked this · 3 months ago
  • lilnudist
    lilnudist liked this · 6 months ago
  • marco-tum-universe
    marco-tum-universe liked this · 11 months ago
  • meranaturae
    meranaturae liked this · 1 year ago
  • patiomaticsblog
    patiomaticsblog liked this · 1 year ago
  • jeannature
    jeannature liked this · 1 year ago
  • htwwolf2
    htwwolf2 liked this · 1 year ago
  • smorani3
    smorani3 liked this · 1 year ago
  • arj-ayd-ee
    arj-ayd-ee liked this · 1 year ago
  • aalich
    aalich liked this · 1 year ago
  • thepurple-knight
    thepurple-knight liked this · 1 year ago
  • thabosworld
    thabosworld reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • thabosworld
    thabosworld liked this · 1 year ago
  • radiphoto
    radiphoto liked this · 1 year ago
  • grambo5264
    grambo5264 liked this · 1 year ago
  • super-bluepeachstudent
    super-bluepeachstudent liked this · 1 year ago
  • brettsblog
    brettsblog liked this · 1 year ago
  • boldbro
    boldbro liked this · 1 year ago
  • turnipfloor76-blog
    turnipfloor76-blog liked this · 1 year ago
  • midoz
    midoz liked this · 1 year ago
  • outlander1001
    outlander1001 liked this · 1 year ago
  • eebcs
    eebcs liked this · 1 year ago
  • nuancesfan
    nuancesfan liked this · 1 year ago
  • kurunda
    kurunda liked this · 1 year ago
  • otdyfw
    otdyfw liked this · 1 year ago
  • lowercapecod
    lowercapecod liked this · 1 year ago
  • randomnudists2019
    randomnudists2019 reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • justlookingblog
    justlookingblog liked this · 1 year ago
  • 1234ssdf
    1234ssdf reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • hercuels
    hercuels liked this · 2 years ago
  • desertmirage8
    desertmirage8 liked this · 2 years ago
  • pharmonde96
    pharmonde96 liked this · 2 years ago
  • vanblr789
    vanblr789 liked this · 2 years ago
  • thedej7in
    thedej7in liked this · 2 years ago
1234ssdf - Untitled
Untitled

167 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags