Self-trust is what you’re actually looking for
Most people Google some version of this at least once:
How do I become confident?
Why do I lack confidence?
How do I stop caring what people think?
And underneath all of those questions is usually the same assumption: Confidence is something I’m supposed to feel before I act.
But that assumption is the problem because confidence isn’t certainty. And it definitely isn’t the feeling that you’ll get everything right.
What confidence actually is..
Confidence is not knowing it will work – it’s trusting yourself if it doesn’t. And I think this perception is what holds a lot of us back. Because we assume that confident people feel sure when, in reality, confident people are just more familiar with uncertainty. And less likely to abandon themselves when things get messy.
Nobody has all the answers. But some people have intentionally focused on the evidence that they can handle not having them.
Why you don’t feel confident yet
If you feel like you lack confidence, it’s usually not because something is missing. The most common reason is that your nervous system doesn’t yet have enough lived evidence that you can survive mistakes and stay intact.
Confidence is built through experience, not insight. It comes after you do the thing that scares you not before. Every time you act without certainty and don’t fall apart afterwards, something changes. Your system updates:
That was uncomfortable… but survivable.
That’s how self-trust is built – not in theory, but in repetition.
Action is what builds confidence
You, like so many other people, may have tried to think your way into confidence. Which doesn’t work because confidence doesn’t come from understanding yourself better.
We actually become more confident when we take action or move while we don’t fully understand.
Action creates data. Data creates self-trust. And self-trust is what eventually gets labelled as confidence.
Stopping caring what people think doesn’t work
You don’t actually stop caring what people think. Instead you build something stronger than it. An internal trust that matters more than external approval in the moments where it counts. Which is a very different thing.
One is suppression. The other is capacity. One is a prison. One is freedom.
The real shift
Most people ask: “How do I become confident?”
But the more useful question is:
“Can I trust myself to handle what happens if this doesn’t go well?”
Once you switch to that perspective, confidence is no longer about controlling outcomes. It’s about not abandoning yourself in uncertain ones.
Why this matters
Confidence isn’t a personality trait. It’s a history. If you were to look at it in detail, it’s a record of moments where you tried, didn’t get it perfect, and stayed with yourself anyway. That’s what slowly builds self-trust at a nervous system level. And that’s what people are actually searching for when they say they want confidence.
That’s why this really isn’t about certainty – it’s about safety with yourself in uncertainty.
You don’t need to have an all-seeing eye and be certain that something will work to feel confident. This is about trusting yourself if it doesn’t work.
That’s why one of the best questions to begin asking yourself if you want to do this different is “How do I start proving to myself that I can handle my own life?”
If you’re ready to start building solid confidence that lasts book a free intro call.