I used to be the poster child for chasing the next big thing. A new diet? I was in. A shiny new personal development program? Sign me up.
A new way to organize your home? Done. Time management will solve all your problems? Here’s my money.
I was constantly starting something new, hoping the next thing would be the secret sauce. I was all in – again and again. But no matter how hard I worked or how many times I started over, I couldn’t shake the feeling that I was missing something. Like the real solution was always one book, one program, one system away.
And then it hit me: none of those programs were built for me. They were designed to be one-size-fits-all, but I wasn’t meant to be one-size-fits-anything.
I am custom.
The missing ingredient in every “breakthrough” was me actually trusting myself to know what was best for me to move forward – not some guru.
Why We Stop Trusting Ourselves
It’s easy to place our faith in a program or plan because, let’s be honest – if it doesn’t work out, we can blame the system instead of ourselves. And it’s easier to trust a program than ourselves when we’ve built a track record of breaking promises to ourselves or putting our needs last. That self-trust muscle gets weak.
We become the person we don’t trust.
We talk down to ourselves. We beat ourselves up for not being perfect. We hesitate to make decisions because we’ve convinced ourselves we always get it wrong.
And just like you wouldn’t trust someone who judged you or constantly let you down – it becomes hard to trust yourself if that’s how you’re treating you.
What Listening to Yourself Actually Looks Like
Rebuilding self-trust doesn’t happen overnight. It starts with learning to love and accept yourself as you are – warts and all. It means showing yourself appreciation, not just when things go right, but even when they don’t.
It means knowing that even if everything falls apart, you still have your own back.
Here’s what it looks like in real life:
- Aligning your goals with your identity, not your insecurities.
- Keeping the promises you make to yourself, no matter how small.
- Using affirmations to gently rewire your inner dialogue.
- Journaling not as a task, but as a conversation with yourself.
The Power of Small Wins
If you’re wondering where to begin, start by noticing where you’ve already shown up for yourself. Did you keep a promise today? Did you pause before saying yes to something that didn’t feel aligned?
Those small moments matter more than any “aha” from a book or seminar. Because self-trust is built in the trenches of everyday life.
What Self-Trust Feels Like
There’s a confidence that comes when you know you will deeply love and accept yourself no matter what. That kind of self-trust brings a quiet resilience. It doesn’t mean you always get it right – it means you don’t abandon yourself when you get it wrong.
So if you’ve been chasing the next secret or waiting for the perfect program to fix you, let me offer a gentle truth:
The answer isn’t out there.
It’s already in you.
You’ve always had the wisdom. It’s time to start listening.
Let’s Have a Conversation:
Have you lost trust in yourself? What has that lead to? Would you like to gain trust in yourself again?