Children are remarkably resilient when they are allowed to try again.
They fall.
They struggle.
They get frustrated.
Then they try again.
Somewhere along the way, adults lose that instinct. Failure becomes heavier. Embarrassment becomes more influential. The willingness to try again shrinks.
Confidence erodes not because adults are less capable, but because they stop granting themselves the permission to learn publicly.
Children expect learning to involve mistakes. Adults expect themselves to be polished immediately.
Rebuilding confidence requires returning to that earlier mindset. One where progress matters more than perfection. Where mistakes are part of growth instead of evidence of inadequacy.
Trying again is not regression. It is resilience.
Confidence grows every time you give yourself permission to continue.
If you want a grounded approach to rebuilding confidence after setbacks in life or leadership, learn more about my work at kinneyconfidence.com.
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