Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Get My Self-Confidence Back – 5 Habits For our Daily Routine

How I Got My Self-Confidence Back – 5 Habits For Your Daily Routine
Posted By : Sweety Rai
Wednesday, June 22, 2016










A story that defines your presence that you are amazing with your Daliy Routine
I noticed it first when I was 14. I let it go. I put it down to being young.
I had to give a short presentation at the school assembly. I didn’t volunteer; my name was picked out of a hat. I’ve never forgotten how I felt when my name was called out.
I had a week to worry about it. I got so anxious that I made myself physically sick. I was terrified.
In my head I started to make up ridiculous excuses to get out of it. I thought of nothing else all week.
Self-doubt set in big time. What if I embarrassed myself in front of the whole school? All my friends would laugh at me. My negative mindset spiraled out of control.
The day came … and guess what. I didn’t get to give my presentation. There was a fire drill during the assembly. I spent the rest of the day on Cloud 9. I was so chuffed that I’d avoided stepping out of my comfort zone.
Some people spend their whole life avoiding situations they find challenging.
In fact that’s exactly what I tried to do. I spent the next few years ‘lying low.’ That suited me just fine.
But when I was 18, situations arose that I just couldn’t avoid.
Career choices loomed which meant interviews. Meeting new people. It meant change.
My lack of self-confidence really began to have an impact. It started to affect life-changing decisions I needed to make. This time it really mattered. It shaped my life.
I made an important career decision to join the army. I failed the assessment course. They told me I lacked self-confidence.
This experience really knocked me for six. I began to question myself continually. I ended up missing opportunities and I got left behind.
So, what happened? Three years later, I reapplied to join the army. This time I got accepted. I passed.
All this happened 30 years ago but I still remember the thoughts and feelings I experienced.
So what did I do to get my self-confidence back?

I formed 5 habits which still help me today. I encourage you to use them too.

Habit #1: Maximize your ‘alert-state’

Never drop your guard. Always be extra aware of how you look and sound whenever you’re in a situation where you need to show self-confidence.
Once you know how you come across you’re in a position to change things.
Knowing how you come across to people means seeing how you look from their viewpoint. That’s obvious, I know. But so many people forget how important it is. You just can’t afford to distract people if you want to be seen as confident.
Route to achievement: Ask people you know well how you come across physically when you’re talking to them.  Be prepared to accept the truth.
Try filming yourself when you’re talking too. Keep on top of any distracting habits you discover. Be super alert to how people are reacting to you when you’re talking. If they’re not listening to you, there must be a reason.
Try experimenting; tweak your body language, change the tone of your voice, be more facially expressive – try something different to help you communicate self-confidence and authority.

Habit #2: Crush the negative voice within

Know  whenever the ‘gremlin’ tries to stop you doing something you know is right for you. Self-confidence is as much about your mind accepting a challenge positively as it is about actually physically carrying out the challenge.
Route to achievement: Work out if you’re a pessimist or optimist; do you complain a lot, do you spend time with negative people, do you always feel hard-done-by, do you feel unlucky, do you smile much?  Answering questions like these will help.
Banish the negative voice in your head the minute you hear it. Stop it being your own worst enemy and making self-confidence harder than it needs to be. Accept that things won’t always go to plan.
Sometimes you will trip up or fail. This happens to ‘confident’ people too. The key is to force yourself to see the positive in everything; even failure. Failure can be positive if you learn from it. See it as an experience worth having. It prepares you better for the next experience.
Start trying to project positivity through your expression and voice. Talking positively helps you to maintain a positive mindset. Make a conscious effort, particularly when the chips are down.

Habit #3: Practice self-confidence every day

Don’t wait for people to present you with ‘opportunities’ to practice being confident. They may not come regularly enough. They may not even come at all. You will lose momentum.
Route to achievement: Force yourself to overcome a confidence challenge every day. Even a small action is better than no action; it must be something you fear or find challenging though. Link this to Habit #4 – planning ahead will be vital.
Think about how you want to be seen by others during your daily challenge; be clear about the outcome you want. Visualise beforehand; see yourself in the act of successfully achieving the challenge.
Remind yourself of what you’ll need to do to succeed. Have the self-confidence to adapt your approach if the challenge isn’t going as you planned. Stay true to yourself but get clever about how you get what you need and want. Use your initiative. This forces you to keep practising being confident.

Habit #4: Look forward, not back.

Never leave your thoughts as just ‘thoughts’. If you do they will get replaced by other thoughts. Learn from past experiences but never dwell.
Route to achievement: Look forward and plan ahead. Reflect regularly on what you want to achieve at work and in your personal life. Do not let one stifle the other.
Convert thoughts into ‘Plans’ by writing them down. When it’s in writing it’s likely to happen. You’ll find this more motivational too.
Your written plans need goals; these should be credible aspirations that are clear and manageable, yet challenging too. If your goals are sizeable, break them down into small steps you can accomplish one at a time.
Try linking this to Habit #3. Address your goals on a daily basis and create tasks from them that challenge your self-confidence. Be sure to measure your goals and monitor your progress.
Don’t panic if a goal isn’t accomplished. Re-appraise the situation, work out what happened, learn from it and change the goal. Be positive; perhaps the new goal will lead to even greater success!

Habit #5: Stop comparing yourself

Get real with yourself. Believe and accept that you’re not the only one. Stop comparing yourself to people you think are more confident than you. Even people who ‘appear’ to be confident find their self-confidence being challenged, maybe even dipping in certain situations.
Route to achievement: Look at confident people in a different light. See them as human, just like you. No one has a natural gift. The fact that they look and sound confident doesn’t mean they’re naturally confident.
From now on, when you’re watching or listening to a confident person, be aware that they are trying to be confident. Most confident people have to do this. They’ve worked out what they need to do physically to project self-confidence.
If they can do it, you can do it. Replace ‘comparing’ yourself to them with ‘learning’ from them and perhaps even copying them if you find them impressive.
Continually remind yourself that self-confidence is a skill everyone can learn. So comparing yourself to others and doubting your abilities as a result makes no sense at all.

The Power Of Forgiving YOU

The Power Of Forgiving YOU


Posted By: Sweety Rai
Tuesday, June 21, 2016

This video has a beautiful message of the power of Forgiveness.
Watch it and tell me I’m wrong. I dare you!
Yet it’s focus is on forgiving others. It inspires you to forgive others. You WANT to forgive others.
Imagine that! Forgiving your worst enemy.
But what if I told you that YOU were your biggest foe?
Because you are.
Now watch this video and only focus on forgiving you. Grab a kleenex – let it out. Because you’ve been living a BIG lie.
Who are YOU to forgive anyone but yourself? Do that and you just might find the need to forgive anyone else dissipates. You’ll take back your power and live in truth where you see no one hurts you unless you choose to let them.

This Single Habit Will Put You In The Top 10%

This Single Habit Will Put You In The Top 10% 

Posted by: Sweety Rai
Tuesday, June 21st, 2016





What if you could become a top performer with ONE habit while halving how much you work every week?
This one strategy can change everything.
I used to think you had to luck out and have incredible talent. I still meet people every day who tell me they believe this.
But once I learned that doing this instead could make me more successful, I got really excited.
Before I get to what it is, check out what I found in my research:
A study in Outliers tracked people with the highest IQ in the world from birth until adulthood.
At first, they were doing wonderfully. But once they got older, their success was no different than a random control group. Some were garbage collectors or worse!
What’s the message?
That most people think IQ, an unchangeable measure of skill, is the key to success. And i t isn’t.
Half of adults use this belief as a crutch so they can have an excuse to not improve their lives. They prefer laziness and will turn away to facts. Don’t be like this.
So what’s the key?
Willpower.
Having studied numerous billionaires, I have found that self-discipline and willpower are the key to success.
I recently read a book called 15 Productivity Secrets, which interviews numerous billionaires. One of them said that he had met a ton of people smarter than him, but unable to do what they had committed to do. That’s why they were less successful.
The magic formula is to be disciplined to do the things no one wants to do.
Billionaire John Paul DeJoria said
“Successful people do what unsuccessful people are unwilling to do.”
Work on improving your willpower and discipline by doing a small thing that will impact your future for the better every day.
But you can do even better.
What if you chose something that had the biggest impact on your life? How about 1 extra book that taught you about business or money? What about 10 extra minutes at the gym?
According to studies:
Willpower is like a muscle. You can exhaust it in a day, which leaves you vulnerable to poor decisions and temptations. Don’t over-exert your willpower but spend some time using it properly to train it.
What have we learned so far?
  • Successful people aren’t there just because they were born with a “gift.” Many weren’t. This is an old-fashioned myth.
  • The key to success  is willpower. Work on strengthening and improving it. Everyone can do this. Most people don’t.
  • People use false beliefs as an excuse or crutch to remain lazy.
Will Smith said in an interview that he didn’t have any extra talent, sex appeal, fitness, intelligence, or anything else. He simply had the work ethic to do what was necessary.
Simple, right?
You say: “Great idea. But…I have no time to do something extra once a day I don’t want to! I’m already exhausted!”
HAHAHAHA!
“Not enough time.”
Most people who say this are wasting hours of time every day. I can easily catch them watching a TV show they don’t have to or spending extra time chatting with friends.
Those extra minutes add up.
Try this. Have something that you want so bad that the fear and pain are pushed aside because of the dream.
Dream big.
Log every activity for the day. I did this and I found that my most blatant waste of time were the 4 to 5 hours after 5pm everyday. For example:
Dinner – (5pm) – 30 minutes
Watching Youtube videos — 1 hour
Browsing the web — 1 hour
Using social media – 1 hour
Playing video games (or game apps) — 1 hour
Wasting time chatting at the gym when I should be working out — 30 minutes
Those are exaggerated estimates but you get the point. On a typical weekday, we have hours of time we waste.
You’ll be surprised to discover that you probably have 3-6 hours of things you could easily do less of. AND EVEN MORE ON A WEEKEND!
Imagine your dream life 3 years from now. Figure out what activities won’t get you there. Figure out which will.
Smalltalk conversation won’t get you there. Watching Youtube won’t get you there.
But doing the right task will.
Maybe for you, that’s exercising more.
Maybe it’s spending more time marketing your business.
Now that you know that X is more valuable  than Y, start right this instant.
  1. Choose 1 task
  2. Spend 10 extra minutes on it a day
  3. Start small so you don’t burn out (like I have)
  4. Work your way up to effectively using the hours you waste
  5. Find a way to make it fun so you don’t burn out
Get started right away. And I’ll see you at the top.
Keep up the heat!
If you have any idea or suggestions, i would love them on the comment box..
Make your day...A DAY...:)
Reach me out: linkedin, twitter

Monday, June 20, 2016

30 Days of Genius


30 Days of Genius : Jamea Altucher

Posted by : Sweety Rai
Monday, June 20th, 2016



James Altucher on CreativeLive | Chase Jarvis LIVE | ChaseJarvis

Mindful Working: The art of being crazy about your work with peace

Mindful Working: The art of being crazy about your work with peace

Posted By: Sweety Rai
Monday, June 20th, 2016

Some days feel like they aren’t long enough, and they haven’t even started! You arrive at work and the messages have already piled up, there is a new project or commitment added to your plate, and your boss expects the work done yesterday. You can feel your blood pressure rising, your teeth beginning to clench and the headache creeping over your skull. Sound familiar? If so, you are not alone. The American Institute of Stress found in their research that 46% of workplace stress is from the workload alone. For many people getting through the day is challenging, and is the only goal.
What if you could change the dynamic so that even in the midst of the stress that swirls around, you stayed calm and mindful? Could it be possible to have a sense of serenity when there is so much chaos, frustration and urgency? Yes, it is possible, but it takes discipline and practice. Most people have not learned how to deal well with overwhelming stress. Fox News reported on a study by Ohio State University which was published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. According to Fox News, “The study found that dealing with persistent, long-term stress (like that from a toxic boss or from caring for an elderly parent) can actually change your genes, leading to an increase in inflammation that can bring on a variety of health issues.”
If you are at a point where the job may actually be killing you, it might be time to practicemindfulness in the workplace. To be mindful doesn’t necessarily mean to meditate in the middle of your worksite. If you are on a highway crew and suddenly everyone stops to sit on the median and hum “OM” while you close your eyes, you might cause others to have an accident! If you work in a busy office in the reception area and can’t greet new visitors because you have your eyes closed, it might not bode well for your customer service ratings. So while meditation can be a very useful practice to do in the morning before you leave home, or even sitting in your car before you enter the workplace, it may be difficult to do during work hours. And if you start your day with meditation, it can help to support your quest for mindfulness.
Becoming mindful at work, in the midst of the chaos, gives you a form of power that can’t be obtained any other way. Imagine if your difficult boss or the increasing workload did not have the ability to bring you down and stress you out. Mindfulness when conditions are chaotic is not easy. It requires a commitment and dedication to practice, practice, practice. If you are ready to shake off the stress and put on the coat of bliss, here are five practices you can employ starting today in your workplace.
  1. Become aware of your self-talk. Among the things that most people are unaware of are the voices in your head. The process goes like this – you see the pile of messages on your desk, you look at the clock and realize you are behind on a certain commitment, and someone walks over to ask you yet another question. Your self-talk kicks in – “I can’t do this. This is overwhelming. There aren’t enough hours in the day. Why did I pick this job??” Instead of letting the self-talk take you over, catch it in its tracks. Change from “WHY?” to “I can do one thing at a time. Let me focus on what I need to do right now.” You might need to do this a thousand times in one day. Learn more about how self-talk works here.
  2. Practice placing your attention where you are. This means that instead of racing through the letter you need to type, or being agitated at the briefing you had to attend or the conversation your boss needed to have, you put your attention on what you are doing. Feel your fingers on the keys. Become aware of how you sit in the chair. Notice your boss’s expressions and tone of voice. Bring your attention to where you are and what you are experiencing. Don’t just race to get to the other side.
  3. Slow down. Slow down your thoughts, your pace, your speech. This seems crazy – there is so much to do that rushing through it could be the only solution, right? Well, rushing causes its own problems: You can make mistakes. You can miss important details. Deliberately and physically slow yourself down to become more aware of what you are doing and how.
  4. Speak less, listen more. Become aware of unimportant chatter and the role it plays in increasing stress and agitation. Talking endlessly about the people, the problems, the company, the job gets defeating, especially if the talking is negative or gossip-oriented. Spend more time in silence and choose not to engage unless you have something really important to say and contribute.
  5. Commit to finding a time every hour that you can be mindful. It may seem like an oxymoron to add mindfulness to a “to-do” list but without a commitment, it will remain something you want to do but don’t get around to doing. Keeping a focus on it, making a conscious decision to do it and committing to a timeframe will all help you to keep being mindful top of mind.
There may not be anything you can do about the issues that swirl around your work every day. They may be obstacles you cannot control. The obstacle you can control, or can influence by practice, is your own response. Refuse to allow your mind and body to be taken over by the negative forces at your workplace. Practice being mindful – you will have everyone around you wondering why you are no longer being drawn in!


Saturday, June 18, 2016

What Makess Remember 90% Of Everything You Learn

What makes Remember 90% Of Everything You Learn

Posted By: Sweety Rai
June 18th, 2016


Whether you’re learning Spanish, a new instrument, or a new sport, we could all benefit from accelerated learning. But the problem is, there’s only so much time in the day.
The key to accelerated learning is not just putting in more hours, but maximizing the effectiveness of the time spent learning.
The Bucket And Water Analogy
Let’s say you were to fill up a bucket with water. Most buckets should not have any problem retaining the water inside, until it starts overflowing at the top.
But in reality, this isn’t how our brains function. In fact, most of the information that enters our brain leaks out eventually. Instead of looking at our brain’s memory as a bucket that retains everything, we should treat it for what it is: a leaking bucket.

While the leaky bucket analogy may sound like a negative connotation, it’s perfectly normal. Unless you were born with a photographic memory, our brains weren’t designed to remember every fact, information, or experience that we go through in our lives.
How To Remember 90% Of Everything You Learn
The development of the Learning Pyramid in the 1960’s — widely attributed to the NTL Institute in Bethel, Maine— outlined how humans learn.
As research shows, it turns out that humans remember:
5% of what they learn when they’ve learned from a lecture (i.e. university/college lectures)
10% of what they learn when they’ve learned from reading (i.e. books, articles)
20% of what they learn from audio-visual (i.e. apps, videos)
30% of what they learn when they see a demonstration
50% of what they learn when engaged in a group discussion.
75% of what they learn when they practice what they learned.
90% of what they learn when they use immediately (or teach others)
Yet how do most of us learn?
Books, classroom lectures, videos — non-interactive learning methods that results in 80-95% of information going in one ear and leaking out the other.
The point here is that instead of forcing our brains on how to remember more information with “passive” methods, we should focus our time, energy, and resources on “participatory” methods that have proven to deliver more effective results, in less time.
This means that:
·       If you want to learn how to speak a foreign language, you should focus on speaking with native speakers and gain immediate feedback (instead of mobile apps)
·       If you want to get in shape, you should work with a personal fitness trainer (instead of watching Youtube workout videos)
·       If you want to learn a new instrument, hire a local music teacher in your city
Ultimately, it comes down to this…
Time Or Money?
How many times have you heard someone say, “I don’t have time to do X…”
I’m certainly guilty of this myself, as I’ve made excuse after excuse about the lack of time I have in my life.
But time is the greatest equalizer of all. No matter who we are, where we are in the world, or how much we strive for efficiency, there are only 24 hours in each day. Every single minute is unique, and once it’s gone, it can never be regained, unlike money.
“You May Delay, But Time Will Not.”
― Benjamin Franklin
So if we all have 24 hours in a day, how do we explain the success stories of young millionaires that started from nothing, or a full-time student going from beginner to conversation fluency in Spanish after just 3.5 months? They learned how to maximize for effectiveness instead of only efficiency.
Let’s say person A spent one hour learning a language and retained 90% of what they learned. And person B spent nine hours learning and retained 10% of what they learned. Doing simple math, person B spent 9x more time learning than person A, only to retain the same amount of information (A: 1 * 0.9 = B: 9 * 0.1).
While the exact numbers can be debated, the lesson is clear. The way to have more time is not to go for small wins, like watching 5-minute YouTube tutorials instead of 15-minutes, but to go for big wins, like choosing the most effective method from the beginning. Or constantly relying on free alternatives, when investing in a premium solution can shave off months, if not years, worth of struggles, mistakes, and most importantly, time.
It’s making the most out of the limited time we have by focusing on solutions that deliver the most impact, and saying no to everything else.
The ability to retain more knowledge in an age of infinite access to information and countless distractions is a powerful skill to achieve any goal we have faster.
By learning how to remember more information everyday, we can spend less time re-learning old knowledge, and focus on acquiring new ones.
We’re all running out of time, and today is the youngest you’ll ever be. The question is: how will you best spend it?