When you feel confident in your writing ability, you know you can accomplish whatever you put your mind to doing—including starting a blog, submitting an article to a magazine, or completing a full-length book. However, low confidence levels can prevent you from trying to create even a semblance of that success.
There’s an easy way to raise your writing confidence level so you feel able to go for your publishing dreams: increase your level of writing competence.
The Confidence Competence Loop
In the world of Certified High Performance Coaching, the relationship between confidence and competence is called the Confidence Competence Loop. The more competent you become, the more confident you feel. Confidence also helps you feel able to tackle tasks that increase your competence.
Confidence and confidence are tightly knit together. If a lack of confidence holds you back, the antidote is more competence. And more confidence leads to your ability to continue leveling up your competence. This is true whether you lack confidence in your writing, social media ability, or any other aspect of becoming a writer and author.
Practice Makes a Confident Writer
The old adage that practice makes perfect is true, but practice also makes confident. Consider this…
At 10 or 12 months old, you took your first steps. You were not a confident walker at first. After all, you just learned to stand on your own two feet! You took one step and fell down but kept practicing until you could walk one, two, three steps in a row.
After a lot of practice, you became a competent walker. Then, with more competence, you became more confident. That’s when you began to run and jump.
You can apply that story to just about everything in life including your writing ability. Practice leads to competence and confidence.
The 10,000-Hour Rule
The Confidence Competence Loops relates to Malcolm Gladwell’s 10,000-hour rule, which he writes about in Outliers. Gladwell claims it takes 10,000 hours of intensive practice to achieve mastery of complex skills and materials, like playing the violin or computer programming.
If you put in 10,000 hours to become competent—or the best—at a task or skill, like writing or blogging, you develop a high level of confidence in your ability at the same time.
You may not start out knowing how to perform the task. Nor do you necessarily begin with inherent skill or ability. Instead, you build these over time.
The Self-Esteem Factor
Many things affect your confidence besides competence. For instance, your level of self-esteem can impact whether you feel able to take on the world—or the tasks that will help you succeed as a writer, blogger, or author.
According to Dr. Joe Rubino, author of The Self Esteem Book, 85 percent of the world’s population is affected by low self-esteem. Yet, self-esteem is not much different than self-confidence.
Here’s a standard definition of self-esteem: “confidence in one’s own worth or abilities; self-respect.” Compare that to a common definition of self-confidence: “a feeling of trust in one’s abilities, qualities, and judgment.”
What’s the difference between the two?
Self-esteem involves your self-perceived level of worth. Do you feel worthy of whatever you want to do, have, or be? Additionally, the level of esteem you hold for yourself depends on whether you respect yourself and your abilities.
On the other hand, self-confidence involves trust in yourself. Do you believe you have the ability, qualities, and judgment to go for your writing and publishing dreams?
Trust in self leads to self-confidence. That trust comes from confidence in one’s own worth or abilities—self-respect.
Trust yourself, and you will confidently move toward your goals and dreams. You’ll tackle new tasks and skills, gaining competence in the process.
The Fear Factor
Fear subdues your self-confidence, too. If you are afraid, you don’t trust yourself to take action successfully. You don’t believe you can do something, or you think there will be negative ramifications if you act.
One way to reduce fear is to increase competence. The higher your level of competence, the more trust you develop in your ability to achieve success. And the more you trust yourself, the more self-esteem and self-confidence you develop.
When you feel competent and confident, you will take bold action. You will act courageously. You will write…and publish!
The Belief Factor
Limiting beliefs also affect your level of confidence. Do you often tell yourself:
- I’m not good enough.
- I’m a horrible writer.
- It’s too hard to get published.
- I don’t have time to write.
- I don’t have anything to say.
- I’m going to look stupid.
- I never win.
- I always fail.
- I can’t do it.
These types of beliefs lower your level of self-confidence and keep you from attempting to increase your competence level.
Limiting beliefs are based on your interpretation of past experiences. You’ve chosen to believe these old “stories,” which are based on minimal fact. Possibly, you’ve decided to believe what others told you as well. Their words reflected their interpretations or perceptions of you and are likely no longer valid—if they were ever true.
It’s time to poke holes in your limiting beliefs. For instance, maybe you struggled to learn how to play the piano when you were six. However, that doesn’t mean you’re going to find it challenging to learn how to create a blog, send a query letter, write a book, or land a publishing deal.
Consider how many things you’ve learned and become competent at over the years. Throughout your life, you’ve become good at many things, like how to run a marathon, parent your child, coach your clients, or cook. You develop competence in these skills and, as a result, now feel confident in your ability as well. You can do the same when it comes to writing.
The Overwhelm Factor
Overwhelm makes you feel defeated before you even begin. When a task or goal feels like “too much,” your trust in your ability to succeed wanes. Additionally, your self-esteem and self-confidence. This is especially true if you don’t have a plan for how to accomplish what you desire.
Many, many writers stop writing or trying to get published because they find the process overwhelming. Don’t let that be you.
Break whatever you want to do, learn, or accomplish into manageable pieces. For example, break your book subject into chapters. Then break the chapter topic into smaller chunks, like content divided by subheadings. Writing the smaller sections will feel much more doable.
Add a process for achieving each piece, and the overwhelm decreases even more. Your process can be as simple using the outline as your writing guide. Write from point to point. Add in some deadlines, and you are all set.
As you use the process or system you create, you’ll begin to feel competent. Confidence will follow as you keep to your schedule, complete tasks or write consistently, and hit your deadlines.
Becoming competent at anything—including writing—is a process. It takes time, determination, and, more often than not, a map to get from where you are to where you want to go. Follow the map, step by step, and you’ll confidently arrive at your destination.
If you lack writing confidence, determine how you can increase your writing competence. Do that, and any writing-related goal becomes possible simply because you feel confident.
How are you going to level up your writing or publishing confidence by leveling up your competence? Tell me in a comment below. And please share this post with a friend who might need a confidence boost.
Kelvin Chifulumo says
Very enabling let know on how to gain writing momentum in a right direction, especially on overwhelming factor. You do a good service Ma’am!