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Home » 2 Habits To Start Trusting Yourself More, By A Psychologist
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2 Habits To Start Trusting Yourself More, By A Psychologist

Press RoomBy Press Room16 January 20265 Mins Read
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2 Habits To Start Trusting Yourself More, By A Psychologist

Self-trust is often viewed as more of a stable personality trait than a habit; people think you either “have” it or you don’t. And for some, that description maps onto them perfectly: they are decisive, grounded and confident in their inner compass. However, others might second-guess themselves, replay conversations or outsource decisions to everyone around them. This explains why self-trust functions more like a relationship than it does a fixed trait. And like all relationships, it is shaped by patterns of behavior.

Trusting yourself has very little to do with being right all the time. It has far more to do with whether you experience yourself as reliable. Take a second and answer the following questions about yourself:

  • Do you follow through on what you say matters?
  • Do you listen when something inside you signals discomfort?
  • Do your actions consistently match your stated values?

When people say they are struggling with self-trust, they really are reacting to a history of small ruptures with themselves, much like the three mentioned above.

(You can take my science-inspired Inner Voice Archetype Test to understand your inner voice so you can trust it better.)

Here are two habits that repair that rupture. They are immensely powerful in turning yourself into someone you can count on.

1. The Habit Of Keeping Small, Specific Promises To Yourself

Our brains require evidence to build trust. It needs to be shown what it is capable of. And every time you make a promise to yourself, your nervous system quietly tracks what happens next. When you repeatedly override promises, such as “I’ll take a break tonight no matter what,” or “I’ll celebrate this win even if it appears small,” the system learns that internal signals are negotiable, and that is how self-doubt is born.

Research on self-efficacy indicates that confidence is less likely to develop from single successes and more from repeated follow-through. Actually, people get to know and trust themselves internally when they are able to live up to self imposed-standards consistently, rather than celebrating themselves after one extraordinary achievement.

In the long run, this dependability reinforces self-trust. Many high achievers tend to fall into the trap of making promises that are more aspirational than actionable, such as “I’ll be more disciplined,” “I’ll stop procrastinating,” or “I’ll finally take care of myself.”

These may seem like promises, but they are actually different versions of ourselves that are yet to be formed. They are identities that are only supported by behavior, and are not easily broken. To grow your self-trust, your promises should ideally be:

  • Small enough to be kept on an average day
  • Specific enough to be measurable
  • Self-referenced, not dependent on external validation

Here are a few examples:

  • “I will stop working when my alarm goes off at 9:30 p.m.”
  • “I will pause for 10 seconds before replying when I feel defensive.”
  • “I will take one walk this week without my phone.”

When you keep these promises, your effort reduces inner conflict eventually. You spend less energy negotiating with yourself, less time second-guessing decisions and less emotional bandwidth managing guilt.

Importantly, when you don’t keep a promise, do not use self-criticism to repair self-trust. Instead, try to repair through accurate accounting. Instead of “I always fail,” the psychologically mature reframe would be, “That promise was too big for my current capacity. Let me recalibrate.”

2. The Habit Of Decision Closure

From a cognitive and physiological standpoint, trust can only emerge when decisions feel complete. Research on worry shows that when the mind repeatedly revisits an unresolved issue (mentally rehearsing, reviewing or revising it), the body responds as if a threat is still present.

This kind of open-ended cognition reduces the nervous system’s capacity to settle, keeping it in a state of vigilance. In such cases, completion is necessary for reaching a regulated state again. When a decision is closed, the brain receives a signal that monitoring can stop, and that is when trust begins to form.

Decision closure is the habit of treating decisions as experiments, not verdicts on your worth. This step is particularly important because certainty is not the prerequisite for trust, but commitment is. When you make a decision and then continue to interrogate it by asking yourself an endless string of questions like,“Was this right?” or “What if I’m wrong?” or “What would a smarter person have done?” you undermine the very authority you’re trying to build. You teach your brain that your choices are provisional and easily revoked.

Decision closure, then, is setting a clear internal rule: Once a decision is made with the information available, I stop punishing myself for not having future data. It, in no way, implies stubbornness or denial of new information. A useful framework for future practices would be to:

  1. Decide deliberately. Slow down enough to gather relevant information and check in with your values.
  2. Name the decision window. Acknowledge that no decision is made with complete certainty.
  3. Close the loop. Once chosen, redirect energy from evaluation to execution.

For example, “I’ve decided to say no to this opportunity for the next three months. I will reassess in June, not daily.” This temporal boundary is critical. It signals to your nervous system that there is containment. You are not at the mercy of endless internal debate.

People who trust themselves are not more accurate predictors of outcomes. They are better at recovering from outcomes. They assume that if a decision turns out poorly, they will adapt, learn and self-correct rather than collapse into self-blame.

Remember, when you practice decision closure, you reduce rumination, improve emotional regulation and strengthen what psychologists call an internal locus of control. You begin to experience yourself as an agent rather than a spectator in your own life.

These habits work together because keeping small promises builds credibility. Practicing decision closure builds authority. Neither habit requires confidence to start. In fact, they are most powerful when practiced in moments of doubt. That’s when the learning sticks.

Wondering if you’re ready to break the pattern? Take the Self-Awareness Outcomes Questionnaire to find out.

Building these habits requires you to know your inner voice really well. Take my science-inspired Inner Voice Archetype Test to know yours.

confidence decisions follow-through Growth Procrastination Productivity promises Self-Awareness Self-efficacy self-trust
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