
In "The Confidence Gap," ACT specialist Russ Harris reveals why waiting to feel confident before taking action keeps you stuck. Discover the revolutionary "confidence cycle" that transformed countless lives by embracing fear rather than fighting it. What if confidence follows action, not precedes it?
著者の声を通じて本を感じる
知識を魅力的で例が豊富な洞察に変換
キーアイデアを瞬時にキャプチャして素早く学習
楽しく魅力的な方法で本を楽しむ
True confidence isn't about feeling good-it's about doing what matters, even when you don't.
『The Confidence Gap』の核心的なアイデアを分かりやすいポイントに分解し、革新的なチームがどのように創造、協力、成長するかを理解します。
『The Confidence Gap』を素早い記憶のヒントに凝縮し、率直さ、チームワーク、創造的な回復力の主要原則を強調します。

鮮やかなストーリーテリングを通じて『The Confidence Gap』を体験し、イノベーションのレッスンを記憶に残り、応用できる瞬間に変えます。
何でも質問し、声を選び、本当にあなたに響く洞察を一緒に作り出しましょう。

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What if everything you've been told about confidence is backwards? Picture a young Nelson Mandela pacing his cell on Robben Island, hands trembling, heart racing with fear. Now imagine him stepping out to address his captors with unwavering resolve. The difference wasn't that his fear disappeared - it was that he moved anyway. This paradox sits at the heart of a quiet revolution in how we understand confidence. From Olympic training facilities to Fortune 500 boardrooms, a counterintuitive truth is taking hold: confidence isn't something you feel before you act. It's something you build by acting despite how you feel. We've inherited a fundamental confusion about what confidence actually means. The first definition - confidence as a feeling of certainty - dominates our cultural imagination. It's what we see in movie heroes and hear in motivational speeches. But there's an older, more powerful definition rooted in Latin: confidence as "an act of trust or reliance." This isn't about feeling sure; it's about moving forward despite uncertainty. When you trust a surgeon to operate, you're not eliminating fear - you're acting alongside it. This reveals the first principle of genuine confidence: action comes first, feelings follow. Yet this simple truth collides with our mind's sophisticated resistance. "It's too hard," it whispers. "You're too busy. You'll fail anyway." These aren't character flaws - they're the predictable protests of a mind doing exactly what evolution designed it to do: keep you safe by keeping you still.