Inner Confidence

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6 Mistakes That Will Sabotage Your Success w/ Women...

If you're the type of guy like me, who gets a boner for efficiency and doing things the right way from the get-go, then I think you'll really enjoy this post.

Most guys fail to develop themselves into the type of man that women want because they take a horrible approach to the process.

They focus on the wrong things, get frustrated, decide it's too hard or not worth the effort and settle for a woman and a life that doesn't fulfill their dreams.

There are tons of mistakes we can make while trying to improve our success with women, but these are the top 6...

1. Not stepping out of your comfort zone

Everyone understands that experiencing muscle strain is mandatory for bodybuilding. It's painful. It hurts. But it's a sign of progress and no one runs from it.

Unfortunately, everyone forgets this in others area of life, so they avoid discomfort and they keep struggling.

It's not your fault. I love being comfortable too. Consumer society bombards us with advertising for products that remove any possible form of discomfort. Don't like walking? Grab an Uber. Don't feel like cooking? Go to McDonald's. Feel bad about yourself? Buy a new Lexus.

I love being comfortable, but I won't allow it anymore. To get good at anything, you have to embrace discomfort. Get HUNGRY for the strain that comes with leaving your comfort zone.

One of my personal favorite expressions comes from the military: "embrace the suck."

With weightlifting, the suck is physical. With approaching women, it's psychological. Embrace that shit. If you're uncomfortable it means you're growing. If you feel comfortable you should be afraid, because that means things in your life aren't going to change.

People just don’t want to tolerate discomfort, even if it comes with a guarantee that the pain will be temporary. They trade short-term comfort for long-term misery. Separate yourself by embracing the suck.

Making excuses is a normal function of the mind. But don’t let excuses keep you in your comfort zone. A common misconception is that you need to be confident and overcome your excuses before you can face rejection or discomfort, but that’s actually backwards. First you do the thing outside your comfort zone, then you gain the confidence. This is because confidence is based on demonstrated performance.

Let's get specific. When you're uncomfortable, ask yourself: “What sensations am I experiencing right now?”

When I'm about to approach a beautiful woman, my heart races, my throat gets dry and my hands get sweaty. I ask myself, Are you willing to feel a racing heart and sweaty palms for a couple minutes in order to get better at talking to girls?

That’s an easy YES.

Keep embracing the suck every single day, and one day you'll wake up and realize that things don't suck anymore. It worked for me.

2. Obsessing over the outcome and ignoring the process.

Research has shown that top athletes have one factor in common: a growth mindset.

The goal of a growth mindset is to “get better.” In contrast, we have the fixed mindset, with the goal "be good." When they're facing a challenge, beginners often want to “be good,” coming at it with the mindset of worrying about how well they’ll perform. Their ego hurts their ability to learn.

There’s a great idea from Carlos Gracie Sr., one of the primary developers of modern Brazilian jiu-jitsu: “There is no losing in jiu-jitsu. You either win or you learn.”

I challenge you to adopt the goal of getting better. Forget being good. Everything you do provides feedback. Every time you feel discomfort, you make it 1% easier the next time you’re in that situation.

Focus more attention on the process than the results. Making an approach is something you have control over; getting a number is not. So instead of considering an approach a victory if you GET a number, count it as a win if you ASK for a number, regardless of what happens.

When you learn to love the process, the satisfaction and inspiration that come with going after your goals are more rewarding than actually achieving them. This is why top performers are able to easily bounce back from failure.

Guys who obsess over the outcome and ignore the progress typically aren't approaching consistently, so they're not seeing results. Because they aren't seeing results, they don't have the motivation to keep approaching. Which brings me to my next point...

3. Relying on motivation.

That lack of success/lack of motivation vicious cycle we just reviewed creates nothing but frustration, disappointment, and desperation.

99% of the time the solution is to approach more and fight through the suck. But I've been there and I know what it's like: in the moment, that's difficult.

Our egos are sensitive to change, especially major changes. No matter how motivated we feel, our brains will subconsciously resist any life changes we attempt. This is why people so often feel like they sabotage themselves and give up on their goals.

Let's revisit the bodybuilding example. The most important part of bodybuilding is showing up at the gym, over and over. Major positive life change occurs as a series of tiny changes fueled by effective habits, not from a giant burst of motivation. Consistency beats motivation every time.

4. Not changing your environment.

I'm an unhealthy food and leftovers addict. If there are leftovers in my fridge, I will eat them every time. If my Chipotle burrito falls on the floor, I'll still eat it. What can I say, I'm still a fat kid at heart.

So when I do have an occasional cheat day (which my diet allows), I've learned that I must throw my leftovers away before I go to bed or eat everything! Who am I kidding, it's always the latter option, lol. I don't rely on willpower, because it will fail every time. I design my environment to make success automatic.

It's the same with dating. You'll succeed if you create an environment that makes progress inevitable.

Live somewhere where there are women around. Hang out with other guys who are good with women. Go out all the time. Get a second job bartending.

Guys have no problems moving to a different city for their career, but are rarely willing to move to a better market for meeting women. That's despite the fact that the decision of who to marry is the single greatest factor for your overall happiness. It just doesn't make sense to me. Shape your environment and you'll get what you want.

5. Having unrealistic expectations on how long this process takes.

Our society teaches us to view life improvement in black and white, all or nothing. Either I’m going to stick perfectly to my new diet, or it’s not worth trying.

In reality, we improve our lives by making tiny changes consistently, not by drastically changing overnight. That's why New Year's Resolutions fail.

The way around this is to take small action steps that slip past the part of our mind that resists change. Do one pushup. Floss one tooth. Approach one girl.

The funny thing is that when you have these small habits in place, they naturally sustain themselves and grow. Our brain gets used to doing a single pushup, so doing two becomes no problem. Flossing one tooth seems silly so you automatically start to floss more.

Approaching one girl becomes natural, so you start to do more approaches without realizing it.

For success, momentum is more important than motivation. I'll repeat myself: the most important part of bodybuilding is showing up at the gym, over and over.

6. Not having accountability.

Accountability makes change much more likely. Create a challenge for yourself and talk about it with people who can hold you to it. Set a consequence for failure, like donating $1000 to the person or cause you hate the most if you don't go to the gym 3 times next week.

This is the same method I used to lose 55 pounds in 2011. It's what I use with my students to get them results: I put them on approach bets where they put a serious amount of money on the line. Guess what? Approach anxiety is no longer a problem.

They embrace the suck and get it done. One of my students even dated the first girl he met on an approach bet for a couple years.

It's tough to focus on getting better instead of being good when you have no one there to laugh at your failures with you and make sure you keep showing up. My skills with women improved rapidly when I was younger because I had friends to go out and rejected with. We laughed at each other when girls would blow us off and it made the process way less painful.

Putting it all together

By this point we've seen that success doesn’t happen in huge leaps. It occurs in small increments. We don't go to bed unhappy one night then magically wake up and say "I'm different now, I made it today!" When we create the right small habits, we slowly become successful over time.

Our society loves the fantasy of the "overnight success." But real overnight successes take years of hustling, and it's a long, tedious process.

If I had to pick just one of these as the most important, it's the final one: accountability. Even if you mess up the first six principles on this list, having accountability forces you to succeed. That's why I've designed this element into the Inner Confidence Community.

Our measuring stick, curriculum path, and end goal is what I call the Inner Confidence Belt System. Super creatively, the end game is to be a black belt. Equally creatively, the starting block is white belt.

Each belt level has accountability built in. From day one, you'll be paired up with an experienced mentor.

It’s so easy to claim we want to approach more beautiful women...we want to learn from successful mentors...we want to live a life where we can choose what kind of relationships we want. Even the most self-aware guys can SAY that.

But what are you doing about it?

I force my students to succeed, because if they don’t then that means I’ve fail as a coach, and I feel like a loser when I fail. That looks different for every guy. For newer students it's often approach bets, accountability coaching calls, and some other tricks I have up my sleeve.

For other students, it's more hanging out with other guys in the group and getting coaching in person.

Apply for the program and we'll jump on a phone call to see if it's a good fit.

Cheers,

Robbie