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Journal

What Conversations Taught Me About Confidence

What Conversations Taught Me About Confidence There was a time when starting a conversation felt uncomfortable. Asking questions.Introducing myself.Speaking to people who had more experience. It was easier to stay quiet. Over time, that started to change. Not all at once, but gradually — through small moments of choosing to engage instead of hold back. Asking one question instead of none. Starting one conversation instead of avoiding it. And with each conversation, something became clear. Confidence wasn’t about having the perfect thing to say. It wasn’t about knowing more than the other person or trying to impress them. It came from being present. From listening. From being willing to learn. Conversations create exposure. https://youtube.com/shorts/-bUxY_P0GyA?feature=share They put you in rooms you might not have felt ready for. They introduce you to perspectives you haven’t experienced yet. They challenge the way you think, not by force, but by understanding. Sitting across from someone who has built something — hearing about their setbacks, their decisions, and the moments that shaped them — changes how you see your own path. It makes things feel more possible. More real. And it builds confidence in a different way. Not through performance, but through perspective. Over time, conversations stop feeling intimidating. Not because the stakes are lower, but because you’ve practiced showing up in them. You learn that you don’t need to have all the answers. You just need to be willing to ask better questions. Confidence grows through conversation.  

Journal

Confidence Is Built Before the Moment

Confidence Is Built Before the Moment Most people think confidence shows up in the moment. On the court.On stage.In a conversation. But what looks like confidence in those moments is almost never created there. It’s built long before. https://youtube.com/shorts/D_dCOZKmrrA?feature=share It’s built in early mornings when no one is watching. In repetition that feels unnoticed. In preparation that doesn’t get posted or recognized. It’s built in quiet effort — showing up again and again, even when progress isn’t obvious. There’s a part of the process that isn’t visible. The part where things feel uncertain. Where the outcome isn’t guaranteed. Where it would be easier to wait until you feel more ready. But confidence doesn’t come from waiting. It comes from doing. From stepping into moments before you feel fully prepared. From trusting the work you’ve already put in, even when it doesn’t feel like enough. From choosing presence over hesitation. Over time, something shifts. What once felt uncomfortable becomes familiar. What once required effort becomes instinct. Not because confidence appeared suddenly, but because it was built gradually. That’s the part people don’t always see. The moment isn’t where confidence begins.It’s where it shows. Confidence is built before the moment.

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