7 Ways to
Soothe your Shyness
Shy people instinctively know
that they are missing out. Shyness equals lost opportunities,
less pleasure and fewer social connections. Shyness can be
crippling but there are tried and tested ways to make it a
thing of the past.
When I was fifteen I was shy.
I recall an attractive girl attempting to engage me in
conversation. My shyness made me focus on me instead of her. I
heard my own voice but not hers and I thought about what I was
trying to say instead of what she was trying to say.
The formula for shyness is
"too much focus on the self" plus anxiety. To make it even more
unpleasant, sometimes when you are feeling shy you experience
physical sensations which 'hijack' your calm logical
self.
My pulse raced, my mouth dried
up and I felt like the village idiot! I couldn't think what to
say so I said nothing apart from making barely audible grunting
noises! Cary Grant eat your heart out! When I detected pity in
her eyes (or was it contempt, or boredom) I mumbled my excuse
and got out of there. I hated being shy and was determined to
change it.
How shyness is developed
and maintained
Shyness really is a
combination of social anxiety and social conditioning. To
overcome shyness you need to learn to relax socially. This
enables you to direct your attention away from yourself and
gives you the space to practice certain conversational skills.
In most cases, the heightened emotions of socializing when
young simply condition the sufferer to respond to social events
with fear, instead of excitement and pleasure.
Relaxed socializing is so
pleasurable, not to say productive, but it is an advantage
denied to many until they learn to relax. To start reducing
your own shyness, I want you to absorb the following tips and
ideas and start to put them into practice:
1) Think
about the way you feel and behave around familiar people
you are comfortable and spontaneous around. It's that
feeling transferred to new people and situations that
equates to your emerging social confidence.
2) Focus
your attention away from yourself. Sure, you can think a
little bit about how you are coming across, but if all
your focus is on your own words and feelings then you
might as well be by yourself. Notice what other people
are wearing and make a mental note, listen to their
conversation, imagine where they might live, make a point
of remembering names. Not only does this give you more to
talk about, it also 'dilutes' social anxiety leaving you
feeling calmer.
3) Ask
people open questions. Many people like to talk about
themselves and will find you interesting if you find them
interesting. Ask questions that require more than a
'yes'/'no' response such as 'What do you like about this
place?' rather than: 'Do you like this place?' Once
they've answered use 'add-on' questions connected to the
first such as: 'What other places do you like in this
city.?' Next you can express your views. This is a great
way to get the conversation going. If the conversation
doesn't 'take' then no matter, you've done your
bit.
4) Stop
trusting your imagination so much! Have you ever had an
imaginary picture in your mind of a holiday destination
only to arrive and find the reality is different from the
way you had imagined? That's how reliable imagination is.
Stop imagining what others think. I do lots of public
speaking and I've long since stopped trying to second
guess what others think of me - it's just too painful.
Besides, what a person thinks about you has a lot more to
do with who they are than who you are.
5) Stop
using 'all or nothing' thinking. The 'completely
this/completely that' style of thought occurs when you
are emotional. People who are depressed, angry or anxious
see reality in terms of differing extremes, simplistic
all or nothing terms. An angry person is 'right' and you
are 'wrong'; the depressed person feels like a 'failure'
while others are a 'success'. In reality, life is
composed of infinite gray areas. So stop fearing that you
might say the 'wrong' thing! Or that people will 'hate'
you. Once you start to relax more socially you'll notice
much less black or white thinking because anxiety
actually causes you to think in all or nothing
terms.
6) Take
your time. You don't have to blurt things out. Ask
questions and if questions are asked of you can take time
to consider your response (within reason). Don't just
blurt out what you think might be the 'right' answer. A
slow answer is a relaxed answer.
7) Finally,
use hypnotic rehearsal. Hypnosis is the quickest way to
change your instinctive/emotional response to any
situation. Only think about meeting others when your mind
and body is relaxed. This conditions you to associate
relaxation with being around new people. In fact you'll
find that when you relax deeply enough often enough
whilst hypnotically rehearsing being comfortable around
others you'll reach the point where you just can't be shy
any more! This is what I call a 'happy
inability!'
I now love meeting new people
and suspect that my current social confidence would be
unrecognizable to my fifteen year old self.
Overcome shyness
now at
HypnosisDownloads.com
Article by Mark Tyrrell
of Hypnosis Downloads.com.
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