Confidence Matters

Sue Reid

This podcast explores confidence, aiming to help anyone struggling with self-esteem or those wanting to improve it in specific areas of their life. Transforming self-doubt into self-belief to build an unshakeable self-confidence. suereid.substack.com

  1. 6d ago

    It Is Hard Being Someone You Are Not

    This month, we’re exploring what it means to live in alignment. What changes when you stop trying to become someone else and start living as yourself? As we enter the second half of 2026, this feels like the most important conversation we’ve had so far. June’s theme of self-trust was about trusting yourself. In many ways, self-trust is the foundation, and alignment is its expression. Where self-trust asks of us, ‘Can I trust myself?’, alignment asks, ‘What happens when I do?’ “I was living a life that didn’t belong to me.” My client, Faye, had a life most people could only dream of. Yet one day she realised that her sons were the only part of her life she truly loved. For years, something had been nagging at her. Despite a luxurious lifestyle, it never felt quite right. Faye never felt she had achieved ‘enough’. Nothing really meant anything to her, not even her husband, whom she discovered had been cheating on her for years. She didn’t blame him; she knew she had become a bitter person. ‘I was living a life that didn’t belong to me, and I am ashamed to say, I hated it.’ Faye told me. Faye’s parents had fled Sri Lanka in the early ‘60s due to civil unrest. Her mother was pregnant at the time, and Faye was born in Australia. Life was tough, and her parents worked very hard. Faye grew up believing that nothing comes easily without sacrifice and effort. Her parents constantly told her that if she worked hard enough, she could build a great life in Australia. So she did. Faye realised that the shame she felt stemmed from her parents’ poverty, and that she had everything they could possibly have dreamed of. But it wasn’t her dream. Living out of alignment For much of my life, I thought my problem was a lack of confidence. I believed that if I could become more outgoing, more interesting, and more like other people, I would finally feel comfortable in my own skin. I spent years trying to prove myself, just to fit in and meet expectations. What I’ve come to realise is that trying to become the person we think we should be rarely brings peace. Deep down, our body always knows when we are living someone else’s version of our life. Misalignment occurs when you are not living in alignment with your own choices and values. What matters most to you is not reflected in the life you lead. You may be: * Saying yes when you want to say no. * Staying silent when you want to speak. * Pursuing goals that don’t matter to you. * Hiding parts of yourself to gain approval. * Living according to expectations rather than values. It often happens gradually. No one decides to abandon their true self. It happens in small ways over many years. Signs you are misaligned Persistent exhaustion You feel worn out and exhausted most of the time, even though you get enough sleep. Living a life that doesn’t align with what your inner self wants will slowly drain your energy. You are carrying the weight of a life that isn’t yours. Resentment Constantly saying yes to things you really want to say no to takes its toll. When you don’t feel appreciated, resentment builds. When you set boundaries and people ignore them, you start to feel annoyed. You feel torn between what you are being asked to do and what you feel is right. These are signs that your needs are being ignored. Restlessness Like Faye, your life on paper looks good. Deep down, you know something is missing. There is a real pull to find it. Overthinking Your mind is trying to keep you safe, while something deeper inside you knows that a different path would feel truer. This makes decision-making harder. There is a conflict between your mind and your deeper self. Seeking validation You constantly look for someone to confirm that you are good enough because you no longer believe it yourself. Why we drift away from ourselves Our brain wants us to survive. As such, it is always on the lookout for danger. As children, we feel that belonging is essential for survival. Our brains learn very quickly that being accepted keeps us safe. Unfortunately, we often then grow up feeling insecure for understandable reasons. With a strong desire to belong to our ‘tribe’, we learn: * Fear of rejection. * Fear of criticism. * Fear of conflict. * Fear of disappointing people. As children, these strategies helped us feel safe. The problem arises when we continue using them long after they stop serving us. Alignment doesn’t mean perfection Living in alignment simply means returning to yourself again and again, understanding who you are at your deepest level, knowing your core values and making choices that feel honest, and trusting yourself enough to honour what matters to you. For years, I thought confidence meant becoming someone else. Now I see that confidence grows when you stop fighting yourself. As you step into your authentic confidence, you stop trying to prove your worth. You understand that your needs and feelings are important and must never be abandoned. Perhaps you’ve recognised yourself in these words. If so, please know there is nothing wrong with you. Feeling out of alignment isn’t a personal failure. It’s a calling, a quiet invitation to come back to yourself. The beautiful thing is, you can begin with one small choice today. Questions to reflect on this week * Where in my life do I feel most like myself? * Where do I feel as though I am performing or pretending? * What am I doing simply because I think I should? * What would feel lighter if I trusted myself more? * What is one small way I can honour myself this week? Living in alignment isn’t about becoming someone new. It’s about returning to who you’ve always been. The path was always there. Self-trust simply gives you the courage to walk it. If you are feeling out of alignment and want to explore your true path, come and work with me. Over the years, I have mastered confidence and self-belief. You can too.Much loveSue xx This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit suereid.substack.com/subscribe

    8 min
  2. Jun 23

    I was a Square Peg Trying to Fit a Round Hole

    Who do you trust? You might have said your best friend, your partner, your mother, or someone else. Most people won’t automatically think of themselves as the person they trust most. More than likely, the person you trust doesn’t even trust themselves. Why don’t we trust ourselves? The answer links back to last month’s theme: negative self-talk. It’s very difficult to trust someone who is constantly criticising, judging, or pressuring you to do more and be better. In any relationship, trust grows when you accept the other person for who they are, rather than trying to change them. The relationship you have with yourself is no exception. Many of us: * Criticise ourselves. * Compare ourselves. * Focus on our flaws. * Replay our mistakes. * Wish we were different. Then we wonder why we struggle to trust ourselves. Wanting to fit in When I was a teenager, my one ambition was to be one of the ‘cool’ girls. I hated the shy, awkward girl who never knew what to say. That was me. Looking back, I can see that my issue wasn’t just a lack of self-confidence or low self-esteem. My real problem was that I was trying to be someone I wasn’t. I was that metaphorical square peg trying to fit into a round hole. I didn’t lack friends. I had some lovely ones, but I am ashamed to say, they weren’t good enough. That sounds horrible, but I didn’t like the person I was. So many of us grew up believing some variation of ‘I am not good enough.’ For me, it meant constantly comparing myself to my younger sister. I learned to check everything I thought and did against the question, “Is this good enough?” In my young mind, good enough meant looking, speaking, and acting like those girls. But I was never accepted; I stayed an outsider. After leaving school, I dated a man 7 years older than me. That felt like something a ‘cool girl’ would do. He stabbed me when I tried to end the relationship. That sent a message to my 17-year-old nervous system that leaving a relationship is dangerous. The message was clear: do not upset people. I realise now that this trauma led me to self-sabotage, people-pleasing and social anxiety. All of these stemmed from my lack of self-trust. When your words, feelings and actions are not aligned, your internal nervous system believes you cannot be trusted with your life. This means you: * Doubt your ability to achieve any goal. * Find it difficult to make decisions. * Seek constant validation. * Overthink and ruminate. Which leads to: * Suppressing your emotions because you don’t want to appear weak. * Ignoring your needs because you don’t want to seem selfish. * Twisting and shaping your identity to fit who you think you should be. * Agonising over your mistakes because you seek perfection. Acceptance comes before self-trust The way to start trusting yourself is to allow yourself to be who you are. That means accepting who you are and where you are right now, and then moving forward from there. You don’t need to become anyone else. You are good enough already. When you accept yourself, that becomes your new belief. I am good enough. This is where acceptance is often misunderstood. It doesn’t mean giving up and staying the same forever. It also doesn’t mean you will love yourself unconditionally overnight. It simply means telling the truth. This is who I am.This is where I am.I no longer need to fight myself. For years, I thought confidence would arrive when I finally became someone else. The ‘cool girl.’ But that was not me. It was never who my soul believed I was. It was a false image I was worshipping. The power of gratitude Before I could trust myself, I had to become grateful for the woman who had survived all she had suffered. The trauma of being stabbed five times at a young age.Living through another two abusive relationships.Becoming depressed and suicidal. I am grateful to have found the light and to be able to reopen my heart. I have used the powerful energies of love, kindness and gratitude to guide me. These experiences have made me more resilient and a calmer, kinder person. The more I accepted who I am, the safer it felt to simply be me. I began to trust and love myself. That is not arrogance; I am far from perfect. What I am is unique. There is no other me in the world. We don’t learn to trust ourselves by striving for perfection. We learn through repair. When you accept yourself, self-trust follows. You begin to respect the person you are. You stop thinking you need to change and realise you are returning to yourself. I realise now that the shy, sensitive, thoughtful girl was never the problem. My suffering stemmed from believing she should be different. Once that pressure began to ease, self-trust finally grew, as there was no longer a constant battle between who I was and who I thought I ought to be. When I stopped rejecting myself, my confidence grew. That was the beginning of self-trust. When we stop criticising ourselves long enough to listen, we begin to hear something important. Our own voice. Something to reflect on this week * Is there a part of you that you have been trying to change, hide, or reject? * Do you ever feel like a “square peg in a round hole”? * How often do you ask yourself, “Am I good enough?”? What would happen if you stopped? * Do you find yourself ignoring your own feelings, needs, or opinions? * What would self-acceptance look like for you right now? * If you trusted yourself a little more, which decisions would become easier? I am considering coaching someone as I write my book. The coaching would follow the transformation framework I use, the one that, as yet, doesn’t formally exist but is everything I have learned in my own transformation. It won’t be free, and it won’t be easy. That said, if you are ready to transform your life and want to know more, send me a message. I will be offering a place to only one person, so you will have my full attention. Much loveSue xx This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit suereid.substack.com/subscribe

    8 min
  3. Jun 11

    What I Wish I Had Understood Earlier About The Anxiety I Suffered For Years.

    This is the second post for our June theme of self-trust. If you missed the first, you can read or listen to it here: Week 1 - The Reasons Why We Stop Trusting Ourselves Self-trust is not about knowing which path is perfect. It is about trusting yourself to walk whichever path you choose. I have stood frozen at the metaphorical fork in the road so many times. Decisions are hard when you don’t trust yourself. I had three toxic relationships. I left the first one very quickly. That day, three months into our relationship, he hit me. That day, it was over. At least for me. For him, it wasn’t over at all. He stabbed me five times and left me in the road. Now I understand more about how the nervous system tries to keep us safe. To my 17-year-old brain, leaving became associated with danger. The next time, leaving might cause even more pain. The next time, I might not survive. Two more toxic relationships followed. It took fourteen years before I was free. As I slowly rebuilt my confidence, I began to realise how much I had limited my life by not trusting myself. The company I wanted to leave, but I held off for years.The qualifications I wanted to pursue, but I didn’t.The opportunities I talked myself out of.Even my writing and coaching journey remained on hold until retirement. There was always the same underlying question: “What if I get this wrong?” And that question shaped far more than my relationships. When you doubt yourself Last week, we explored some of the reasons we stop trusting ourselves. For many of us, self-distrust isn’t something we are born with. It develops slowly through criticism, rejection, difficult relationships, and experiences that teach us it isn’t safe to make mistakes or be ourselves. While self-distrust may begin as a form of protection, it rarely stays that way. Over time, it shapes how we live. Most of us think self-doubt shows up as a lack of confidence. We imagine it looks like shyness, avoiding attention, or nervousness. I grew up thinking that being a shy introvert was my problem. But self-distrust often runs much deeper than that. It influences the decisions we make, the opportunities we take, the relationships we stay in, and the way we speak to ourselves every day. And often, we don’t even realise it is happening. Last week, I spoke about having social anxiety for years. The thought of having conversations with people I didn’t know filled me with dread. Even attending social events felt uncomfortable. At the time, I thought the problem was how people would react to me. * I thought I wasn’t interesting enough. * I thought I wouldn’t know what to say. * I thought people might judge me. Looking back now, I can see something different. The real problem was not the conversation itself.The problem was that I didn’t trust myself to handle it. I didn’t trust myself to know what to say.I didn’t trust myself to recover if I became embarrassed.I didn’t trust myself to cope if someone judged me or didn’t like me. My fear was never really about the conversation. It was about what might happen if the conversation didn’t go perfectly. That realisation changed everything. Signs you don’t trust yourself * Constantly seeking reassurance before making a decision. * Asking lots of people for their opinion before listening to our own. * Knowing what to say but staying silent anyway. * Ignoring our own opinion because we assume someone else knows better. * Staying where we are not happy because we fear making the wrong change. Many people spend years waiting to feel certain before they act. But whatever decision we make, there is rarely a 100% guarantee that it is the right one. As humans, we will always make mistakes, and there will always be people who disapprove. The cost of self-doubt When we believe we need guarantees before moving forward, life can start to feel very small. This is where we begin to procrastinate and overthink. We hesitate and get stuck because our nervous system seeks safety rather than uncertainty. It tells you: “Maybe you can’t handle this, and if you go ahead, you might get hurt.” Remember, your brain wants you to survive. The emotional cost of self-doubt can be significant and exhausting. * The endless mental conversations. * The second-guessing. * The replaying of events. * The need for reassurance. * The fear of getting things wrong. All of it consumes energy and keeps us focused on avoiding mistakes rather than on living fully. Training your nervous system What I have come to understand is that self-trust is not about believing you will always make the right decision. It is about believing you can handle whatever happens next. That is a very different thing. Self-trust begins when we stop asking: “What if it goes wrong?” And start asking: “What if I can handle it?” That shift changed my life. The fear and discomfort didn’t disappear overnight. But over time, I learned that I could survive discomfort, mistakes, rejection, uncertainty, and disappointment. I could trust myself to cope. Self-trust is not always knowing the answer, nor is it being perfect. It is the quiet confidence that whatever happens next, you will stay on your own side. Questions to reflect on * Where does self-doubt affect your life most strongly right now? * What opportunities have you avoided because you didn’t trust yourself? * Do you find yourself seeking reassurance from others before making decisions? * What is one area of your life where you would like to trust yourself more? * What would become possible if you believed you could handle mistakes, setbacks, or uncertainty? * What is one small decision you could make this week without seeking anyone else’s approval? I think the area of self-trust is vital to understand. I literally only just connected the dots between the trauma I suffered as a young woman and the anxiety I suffered for years. If self-trust is something you feel you need to work on, I invite you to reach out for a chat to see how I can help. Much loveSue xx This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit suereid.substack.com/subscribe

    9 min

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About

This podcast explores confidence, aiming to help anyone struggling with self-esteem or those wanting to improve it in specific areas of their life. Transforming self-doubt into self-belief to build an unshakeable self-confidence. suereid.substack.com

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