The Mental Game: Why Confidence Is Built, Not Born

Confidence is often mistaken as something you’re either born with or not. In reality, confidence is a skill — and like any skill, it can be trained.

Athletes frequently experience dips in confidence after:

  • An injury

  • A performance slump

  • A critical mistake

  • Increased competition

  • Transitioning to a higher level

The key isn’t eliminating self-doubt — it’s learning how to respond to it.

🔹 Confidence Is Built Through Evidence

Confidence grows from:

  • Repetition

  • Preparation

  • Tracking progress

  • Realistic self-talk

  • Learning from setbacks

Instead of asking, “Am I good enough?” try asking:

  • What have I trained for?

  • What strengths can I rely on?

  • What is in my control right now?

🔹 The Performance Reset Strategy

When confidence dips mid-performance:

  1. Breathe (4 seconds in, 6 seconds out)

  2. Use a cue word (e.g., “steady,” “strong,” “present”)

  3. Focus on the next play — not the last one

Mental toughness isn’t about perfection. It’s about recovery.

If you’re ready to strengthen your mental game, therapy can provide structured tools to help you build lasting confidence — both in sport and beyond.