ISBN-13: 9783565233878 / Angielski / Miękka / 220 str.
Confidence isn't something you build through force-it develops through understanding how self-belief actually forms. This book explores the psychological and neurological patterns beneath self-doubt, examining how our nervous system learns to register safety in our own presence, why external achievements feel hollow without internal permission, and what happens when we mistake confidence for the absence of fear. Through understanding how early relational experiences shape our capacity for self-trust, why reassurance from others provides only temporary relief, and how our bodies hold patterns of worthiness or shame, this work offers insight into the deeper structures of genuine self-belief. Rather than prescribing affirmations or achievement goals, it invites readers to explore how confidence emerges from nervous system regulation, self-compassion practice, and the gradual dismantling of conditional self-acceptance. For anyone who has accomplished much but still doubts themselves, or who finds their sense of worth fluctuating with circumstances, this book examines the science behind sustainable self-belief.
Real confidence isn't the absence of doubt-it's the nervous system's gradual learning that you're safe even when uncertain.