Sue (nadaurz), i don't know what the statistics are, but
most of the people i've personally known to quit smoking, did not succeed the first time, and many of them had to try several times, but eventually they made it. If it were so easy to quit, i don't think we'd have half as many smokers these days as we do. I'm not saying this to discourage you (many, MANY people have succeeded in quitting), just to point out that many of the great accomplishments in life are not won the first time out. I remember hearing that the part of the population with the
most declared bankrupcies in their past... are you ready for this? ...are the top Fortune 500 CEO's!!! That's right... the multi-millionaires and billionaires.

I mean, look at Donald Trump... he came back from bankrupcy with a bang. I think i remember correctly, that the top Fortune 500 CEO's have twice the rate of bankrupcies in their past as the average population.
When i heard that little statistic i was dumbfounded and wondered, how come? What does that mean? And i think what it means is, A) they were willing to go for their dreams, even when it meant taking big risks, B) they did not give up on their dream after a big failure, and C) they considered their "failure" a valuable education, and they
used it! and ultimately succeeded because they adjusted their strategy
using the education of their failure. I think the saying goes, "it isn't a failure if you ask yourself what you've learned from this."
And we all have failures. My former housemate took her driver's test 5 times before passing (let me tell you, it was a little scary those days taking her out for driving practice!

), and we think they pitied her the last time and just passed her because she was so nervous and did so many things wrong during her test.

She's gotten better with practice, though, and i can actually keep my eyes open now when i'm in the car with her (just kidding, she's perfectly safe now). And i have a friend, who, just this past week he lost $13,000 because he failed to submit a couple of the supporting materials with his bill on a contract, and there is no way for him now to recoup the money, and he had to absorb the expense. That's a big OOOPS!
I've got my own issues with failure. Losing money hardly bothers me... it's only money. Losing people i care about on the other hand, just eats me up and never seems to go away, and usually i blame myself. Unfortunately, i've let this hang me up from feeling confident, and i've let it keep me from trying to find a good mate. But... i just have to change that. I have to say, okay, what have i learned? ...and not give up and move on, and that's going to be hard to do if i see this as a FAILURE rather than an education and merely a temporary set back. The more kuddos i can give myself for trying my best, for what i did right, and for understanding what i've learned, the better my chances of success next time.
Perhaps the only true failure, is quitting. We usually quit because we've become discouraged... and that brings us back to how confidence plays into this.
I'm noticing more and more, how often inside my head, even when i don't voice it, i'm either explaining why i
can't do things, picking at myself for how i think i should be more successful, or placing some kind of limitation on myself... that may not at all be true. I also just plainly focus on the half empty glass... how i feel i'm lacking, focusing on my failures instead of my gains, or focusing on what my "barrier" is to success, instead of what Tami suggested, focusing on what i
can do. With this kind of self-talk... no wonder i'm not confident! I'm like an abusive parent to myself... always on my back nagging.
So besides the general advice of stopping the "inner nagging," what might i do to be more aware of it and more encouraging to myself?