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9個(gè)特征讓你成為真正自信的人

所屬教程:英語(yǔ)漫讀

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1. They take a stand not because they think they are always right… but because they are not afraid to be wrong

1. 不是因?yàn)檎J(rèn)為自己永遠(yuǎn)正確他們才表明立場(chǎng),而是因?yàn)樗麄儾缓ε路稿e(cuò)。

Cocky and conceited people tend to take a position and then proclaim, bluster, and totally disregard differing opinions or points of view. They know they’re right – and they want (actually they need) you to know it too.

自大逞能的人習(xí)慣先選擇立場(chǎng),然后宣告、夸口,完全忽視其他不同的觀點(diǎn)。他們覺(jué)得自己是正確的——而且他們想要(實(shí)際上是他們需要)讓你也知道這一點(diǎn)。

Their behavior isn’t a sign of confidence, though; it’s the hallmark of an intellectual bully.

他們的行為不是自信的象征。而是智力上霸凌的象征。

Truly confident people don’t mind being proven wrong. They feel finding out what is right is a lot more important than being right. And when they’re wrong, they’re secure enough to back down graciously.

真正自信的人不在意被人指出錯(cuò)誤。他們覺(jué)得找出什么才是正確的比保持正確更重要。當(dāng)他們犯錯(cuò)的時(shí)候,他們一定會(huì)做出讓步。

Truly confident people often admit they’re wrong or don’t have all the answers; intellectual bullies never do.

真正自信的人總會(huì)承認(rèn)他們錯(cuò)了,或者是他們也不知道。知識(shí)惡霸從不會(huì)這樣做。

2. They listen ten times more than they speak.

2. 他們聽(tīng)比說(shuō)得多。

Bragging is a mask for insecurity. Truly confident people are quiet and unassuming. They already know what they think; they want to know what you think.

夸夸其談是為了掩飾沒(méi)有安全感。真正自信的人是安靜、謙遜的。他們已經(jīng)了解了自己的想法;他們想要知道的是你的想法。

So they ask open-ended questions that give other people the freedom to be thoughtful and introspective: They ask what you do, how you do it, what you like about it, what you learned from it… and what they should do if they find themselves in a similar situation.

所以他們會(huì)問(wèn)一些開(kāi)放式的問(wèn)題,讓其他人能夠表現(xiàn)出他們的想法和反思。他們會(huì)問(wèn)你做了什么,你是怎么做到的,你喜歡這件事哪一點(diǎn),你從中學(xué)到了什么……要是他們處在相同情況下應(yīng)該怎么做。

Truly confident people realize they know a lot, but they wish they knew more… and they know the only way to learn more is to listen more.

真正自信的人明白他們知道很多,但是他們希望能夠知道更多……而且他們知道唯一能夠?qū)W習(xí)更多的方式就是多傾聽(tīng)。

3. They duck the spotlight so it shines on others.

3. 他們避免站在聚光燈下,把機(jī)會(huì)讓給其他人。

Perhaps it’s true they did the bulk of the work. Perhaps they really did overcome the major obstacles. Perhaps it’s true they turned a collection of disparate individuals into an incredibly high performance team.

也許他們確實(shí)做了大部分工作。也許他們確實(shí)克服了絕大多數(shù)障礙。也是他們確實(shí)讓一群不相干的個(gè)體變成了一個(gè)表現(xiàn)好得令人難以置信的團(tuán)隊(duì)。

Truly confident people don’t care – at least they don’t show it. (Inside they’re proud, as well they should be.) Truly confident people don’t need the glory; they know what they’ve achieved.

但真正自信的人不會(huì)在意——至少他們不會(huì)表現(xiàn)出來(lái)。(在心里他們很驕傲,他們也應(yīng)該驕傲。)真正自信的人不需要榮譽(yù);他們知道他們已經(jīng)做到了。

They don’t need the validation of others, because true validation comes from within.

他們不需要他人的認(rèn)可。因?yàn)檎嬲恼J(rèn)可來(lái)自內(nèi)心。

So they stand back and celebrate their accomplishments through others. They stand back and let others shine – a confidence boost that helps those people become truly confident, too.

所以,他們退后,通過(guò)別人慶祝自己的成就。他們對(duì)后,讓別人發(fā)光——這是一種幫助別人同樣變得自信的自信心。

4. They freely ask for help.

4. 他們也要求幫助。

Many people feel asking for help is a sign of weakness; implicit in the request is a lack of knowledge, skill, or experience.

很多人覺(jué)得求助是軟弱的象征,在這一要求中暗示了知識(shí)、技能或是經(jīng)驗(yàn)的缺失。

Confident people are secure enough to admit a weakness. So they often ask others for help, not only because they are secure enough to admit they need help but also because they know that when they seek help they pay the person they ask a huge compliment.

自信的人會(huì)承認(rèn)自己的弱點(diǎn)。所以他們經(jīng)常向別人求助,不僅僅是因?yàn)樗麄冇行判某姓J(rèn)他們需要幫助,也因?yàn)樗麄冎喇?dāng)他們尋求幫助的時(shí)候,這對(duì)他們所求助的人意味著真正的贊美。

Saying, “Can you help me?” shows tremendous respect for that individual’s expertise and judgment. Otherwise you wouldn't ask.

問(wèn)出“你能幫幫我嗎?”表明對(duì)他的專(zhuān)業(yè)性和判斷力的極大的尊敬。不然的話你是不會(huì)問(wèn)的。

5. They think, “Why not me?”

5. 他們會(huì)想,“為什么不是我?”

Many people feel they have to wait: To be promoted, to be hired, to be selected, to be chosen... like the old Hollywood cliché, to somehow be discovered.

很多人認(rèn)為他們需要等待:等待升職,等待被任用,被選擇……正如好萊塢陳舊觀念中那樣,等待被發(fā)現(xiàn)。

Truly confident people know that access is almost universal. They can connect with almost anyone through social media. (Everyone you know knows someone you should know.) They know they can attract their own funding, create their own products, build their own relationships and networks, choose their own path – they can choose to follow whatever course they wish.

真正自信的人知道渠道對(duì)全世界開(kāi)放。他們可以通過(guò)社交媒體聯(lián)系到幾乎是任何一個(gè)人。(任何你認(rèn)識(shí)的人,任何你應(yīng)該認(rèn)識(shí)的人。)他們知道他們可以吸引到資金,創(chuàng)造自己的產(chǎn)品,建立他們的個(gè)人關(guān)系和社交網(wǎng)絡(luò),選擇自己的道路——他們可以選擇任何希望的事業(yè)。

And very quietly, without calling attention to themselves, they go out and do it.

靜悄悄的,沒(méi)有引起任何人注意,他們就著手開(kāi)始做了。

6. They don't put down other people.

6. 他們不會(huì)讓其他人失望。

Generally speaking, the people who like to gossip, who like to speak badly of others, do so because they hope by comparison to make themselves look better.

總的來(lái)說(shuō),喜歡八卦,喜歡說(shuō)別人壞話的人這么做事因?yàn)樗麄兿M@種比較能讓他們看起來(lái)好點(diǎn)。

The only comparison a truly confident person makes is to the person she was yesterday – and to the person she hopes to someday become.

真正自信的人唯一做的比較是和昨天的自己相比較——以及和他希望未來(lái)成為的人比較。

7. They aren’t afraid to look silly…

7. 他們不怕丟臉……

Running around in your underwear is certainly taking it to extremes… but when you’re truly confident, you don’t mind occasionally being in a situation where you aren't at your best.

穿著內(nèi)衣四處跑當(dāng)然是個(gè)極端情況——但是如果你真的自信,你不會(huì)在意偶爾狀態(tài)不好的情況。

(And oddly enough, people tend to respect you more when you do – not less.)

(奇怪的是,如果你這么做了,人們反而會(huì)更尊敬你。)

8. … And they own their mistakes.

8.……他們也會(huì)犯錯(cuò)。

Insecurity tends to breed artificiality; confidence breeds sincerity and honesty.

不安全感會(huì)產(chǎn)生造作;自信會(huì)帶來(lái)真摯和誠(chéng)實(shí)。

That’s why truly confident people admit their mistakes. They dine out on their screw-ups. They don’t mind serving as a cautionary tale. They don’t mind being a source of laughter – for others and for themselves.

這就是為什么真正自信的人會(huì)承認(rèn)他們的錯(cuò)誤。他們享用自己的錯(cuò)誤。他們不介意把自己作為警世的例子。他們不介意成為被別人和自己嘲笑的對(duì)象。

When you’re truly confident, you don’t mind occasionally “looking bad.” You realize that that when you’re genuine and unpretentious, people don’t laugh at you.

當(dāng)你真正自信的時(shí)候,你不會(huì)在意偶爾“看起來(lái)很糟”。你發(fā)現(xiàn)當(dāng)你十分真誠(chéng),不炫耀,人們就不會(huì)嘲笑你。

They laugh with you.

他們會(huì)和你一起開(kāi)懷大笑。

9. They only seek approval from the people who really matter.

9. 他們只尋求重要的人的贊同。

You say you have 10k Twitter followers? Swell. 20k Facebook friends? Cool. A professional and social network of hundreds or even thousands? That’s great.

你說(shuō)你twitter上有1萬(wàn)粉絲?漲一點(diǎn),2萬(wàn)粉絲?一個(gè)有著成百上千粉絲的社交網(wǎng)絡(luò)很酷。

But that also pales in comparison to earning the trust and respect of the few people in your life that truly matter.

但是這和贏得在你生命里真正重要的人的信任和尊重比起來(lái)微不足道。

When we earn their trust and respect, no matter where we go or what we try, we do it with true confidence – because we know the people who truly matter the most are truly behind us.

當(dāng)我們贏得他們的信任和尊重的時(shí)候,不管我們?nèi)ツ?,做了什么,我們都擁有真正的自?mdash;—因?yàn)槲覀冎勒嬲o的人一直在我們身后。


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