6 Ways How to NOT Get Attention

Do you remember seeing a kid throwing a tantrum in the supermarket. Why is he doing this? This is because he is desperately trying to get the sympathy of people around him.

Not only is he not getting what is seemingly his life support (the candy), he is in exceedingly great distress. He doesn’t want to just feel it himself, but he wants the whole world to know it too.

Well… we got our adult version of this um..tantrum.

All because we’re older, bigger, stronger, it doesn’t mean we don’t throw tantrums. I’m no exception either. Adults just throw tantrums in a different way. This article is to reveal how we are wrongly trying to draw attention to ourselves.

There are right ways and there are wrong ways. the pain can be very real but the way we draw attention to it can be wrong.

Now, here are 7 ways how to not get attention -

#1 - Don’t self-pity.

"Woe is me." 

"Man, I am the most unfortunate person in the world." 

"Everything is against me." 

"I am the victim here." 

"Everyone is so mean to me. The world is messed up."

 

Does it sound familiar? Yeah, I’ve been there too. Let me tell you something, it doesn’t matter how much you complain. Nothing is going to change. I understand you might be wrongly accused, misunderstood, overlooked, stepped on, broken down, a complete emotional mess, or rejected, but your situation will not change with complaining.

I know it’s not easy. When you’re hurt, you need support and companionship. Those things are important. You might not have friendships sometimes, but the world will move on.

It’s not anyone’s responsibility to help you except maybe your family's responsibility. It’s not because it’s a selfish world. It’s that you are supposed to be raised to take care of yourself. Emotionally, mentally, physically.

Self-pity is when you want others to feel bad for you. You want them to feel your misfortune, and you don’t deserve any of it. It’s not bad to feel your emotions, but it's bad to be controlled by it.

You don't want to be emotionally dependent on other people.

Don’t be bitter. Perhaps you have been wronged or you made a mistake. Pick yourself up, and move forward.

#2 - Don’t self-criticize.

Most of the time, we don’t really need other people to tell us how horrific our mistakes are. We will criticize ourselves before others get to us. Why? It hurts a little less coming from ourselves.

But self-criticism is rarely productive. Self-reflection, on the other hand, is very beneficial.

Self-criticism is where you bash and beat yourself up until you feel like you won’t do the same mistakes again. Every time you do that, you associate your self-worth along with the results of your actions. Your self-esteem sinks along with it as a byproduct. 

Self-reflection is reflecting on the mistakes you have done and thinking about ways to improve. The key difference is you don't think less of yourself.

Self-criticism is the habitual voice inside you that berates yourself. This prevents your self-esteem from rising again.

#3 - Don’t try to please people.

Another way people try to get attention is by pleasing other people. 

If you please other people, they will think you’re a great person and that will boost your self-esteem temporarily. Self-worth gained from other people never lasts.

Good action, wrong reason.

Helping other people is great. But if you are doing it just to get something (attention) from others, it becomes a transaction. Meaning if you don’t get attention back from them, you grow bitter. You hope to get attention and didn't receive it, so you’re angry and bitter.

Help people because you want to. Don’t be nice only because you want something from them.

#4 - Don’t guilt-trip people.

This is one of my personal dis-favorites if that’s a word. When you use guilt to try to manipulate other people into doing something, it will work for the moment. The heart won't be genuine. What you’ll get is an even more dysfunctional relationship, not the type you want.

When you have people around you because of obligation, that's not friendship. There won't be the genuine relationships that you long for.

#5 - Don’t try to be better than other people.

There are different ways that we try to be better than others...

“Oh, you don’t like me. Well, I never liked you anyways!” (I never liked you first, so I was one step ahead of you, which means I was better.)

“People are all so selfish for not reaching out to me.” (I am the worthy person, and people should feel bad for not helping me.)

When you are angry or emotional, it’s very easy to only think about yourself. Emotions are not wrong. It’s ok to feel anger and sadness, but it’s not ok to take it out on other people.

Degrading others to make yourself appear better, that’s a problem. Don’t use this method to gain attention for yourself.

#6 - Don’t stand around and hope someone will change the situation for you.

A lot of people are empathetic, and they will help you if they see you in trouble, which is great. There are good people in the world. However, understand that they will help you, but they are not responsible for you.

When you are younger, your parents are responsible for you. When you’re an adult, you are responsible for yourself. That means caring for yourself emotionally, cooking for yourself, taking care of yourself, etc.

When you reject that responsibility, you become a child without protection or ability to take care of yourself.

Other people can’t be your new parents, so you have to do it yourself. The attention that other people is most likely momentarily to help you. They can’t support you forever. 

The solution isn't to not ask for help. 

It's to take action. 

Nothing will change for you unless you take action to change things yourself.

We all like to be treasured and focused on, but there are right and wrong ways of getting that attention.

First Step - 

Did I miss any?

- Augustus

Losing Interests, Losing Relationships [Free PDF]

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  • Understanding the 5 CAUSES for an emotional wall between you and everyone else.
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Do You Want To Be Alone & With People At The Same Time?

Do you know the feeling of ambivalence?

Watching your friend getting married while you long for a partner too. That conflicting emotion is the feeling of ambivalence. Two opposing feelings that occupy you at the same time.

Wanting to be loved but scared of people at the same time. That’s another set of conflicting emotions. We want to understand why we are feeling this way, but we don’t want to stay in the feeling of ambivalence for too long.

The constant feeling of two opposite emotions inside us will drive us towards not wanting to feel anything at all and suppressing all emotions altogether.

Wanting To Be With People

It’s very normal to want to be with other people because we all need human contact. As people, we are built for community. We need to be in the community to be emotionally healthy.

I don’t have to tell you that one of the worst pains is the pain of exclusion.

From when we are little, it’s painful to not being able to play as part of the group on the playground. We might tell ourselves that we don’t need them, but deep down part of us still really wants to be loved & accepted as one of the members of the group.

We want to be apart of a community, and we need it. This leads to the pain of loneliness. If you have seen movies of people trapped on an island or a remote place, the hardest part for them is not having anyone to talk to.

Functionally, if we didn’t need people, we can just live by ourselves and feel just fine, but the feeling of loneliness drives us insane. That’s since we’re not wired that way.

It is normal to acknowledge the desire for community.

Wanting To Be Alone

The next part is wanting to be alone. Personally, I feel like it’s fine to want to be alone sometimes. Where it becomes a problem is when it interferes with our desire for community. If we want to be alone because we are afraid of social pressure, that’s a problem.

Being scared of other people and them judging us for every move that we make. That’s a problem. If we are at a point where we don’t like ourselves, we won’t expect others to like us either.

In fact, if we know and like who we are as a person, social pressure wouldn’t affect us as much. If we don’t like our own opinions, we won’t share them with others. We’ll feel boring or dull. That will probably make us think that we are not a fun person to be around and people actually don’t want to hang out with us.

This fear of judgment drives us to take a break in the restroom.
This anxiety makes us want to leave the party a little earlier.
Our self-esteem rises and falls with how others think.

Hm…yeah, not a good place to be.

This is why you probably have both of these feelings at the same time. You don’t want to remain in this position for a long time. You’re probably reading this because you want to find a solution.

The problem is you need to learn how to be emotionally independent from others. If you know how to handle social pressure, you will be able to become part of the community when you want to and be by yourself when you want to. social pressure isn’t bad. You need to learn how to manage your emotions.

You need a decent amount of pressure to pick up a piece of cake. Too much pressure and you’ll squish the cake. The solution is never to eliminate social pressure, it’s to learn how to handle it, because it’s built into every social community.

First Step - 

What scares you most about social situations?

- Augustus

Losing Interests, Losing Relationships [Free PDF]

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  • Understanding the 5 CAUSES for an emotional wall between you and everyone else.
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How Isolation Will Affect You in 20 Years

I don't fear death so much as I fear its prologues: loneliness, decrepitude, pain, debilitation, depression, senility. After a few years of those, I imagine death presents like a holiday at the beach. - Mary Roach (American author)

Isolation is painful. More painful than most people imagine. You can choose between the pain of isolation or the pain of opening up. The difference is once you face the inner pain, it’ll end eventually. Isolation doesn’t.

Isolation messes with your mind, and it has various other damages that amplify with time.

1) No Social Skills

If you don’t talk to people, you won’t have any social skills. Any social skills will fade with time. If we have been away from the community for a long time, we’ll find ourselves less and less in sync with our community. While we have been away from the community, it changed while we stayed the same.

Also, a huge part of social skills is based on emotional maturity. If we are not comfortable feeling through our emotions, we naturally can’t express ourselves fluently. Emotional control is the foundation for self-expression.

Without social skills, even if we knew the same language, it’s easy for us to be ousted, because our unintentional lack of mannerism. Social skills are only picked up within the individual communities.

2) Not Emotionally Matured

When we are away from people, we lose in touch with our ability to manage emotions. We actually learn a good portion of our emotional intelligence based on how other people respond to our emotions. We need to see examples. We need to see how other people express emotions and how the community responds to it.

If we don’t have a chance to practice emotions, we lose that ability.

Emotions are part of your body language. When we want to be fluent in body language and emotional maturity, we have to have at least a partner. We can’t have a conversation by ourselves. Even just being around people and not talking to them helps us regress from being isolated completely.

Losing that emotional mature might look like not having control of our emotions.
If we’re angry, we blow up.
If we’re scared, we withdraw.
Our emotions have more control over us than we have over it.
It’s trainable. Just much harder in isolation.

3) Pain of Regret

Without a doubt, one of the top reasons for isolation is regret. We are the only ones standing still while other people are getting job promotions, getting married, having a family, taking trips, and etc.

We regret why we weren’t more courageous. We blame our personality. We criticize our background. We want what others have so badly and now we have lost time and there is this huge gap between us and others.

When we try to go back into the community, we have no shared experiences to talk about.

“What have you been up to these 20 years?”
Nothing.

4) The Pain of Being Left Behind

Now this leads to the pain of not being able to catch up. When other people are sharing about the stories and experiences that they have, but we have nothing share.

We feel awkward, excluded, and out of place, because for a portion of our lives was just blank, and we have done nothing. No progression. No accomplishments. Just struggling to hold onto to what we already have. Sometimes, we feel guilty or ashamed for not having the same experiences, so we just avoid those social settings altogether.

5) Develop A Habit of Dreaming Life Instead of Living Life

Isolation makes us passive. We lose our ability to reach or strive for something. We sit, receive and let the world happen to us instead of we going to it.

We start to take less and less action and try to imagine what the experiences would be like through people’s facebook posts or instagram feed while in real life, nothing has changed for us.

Passivity and dreaming become a lifestyle.

6) Wasted Life/Time

This one speaks for itself. Time never turns back for anyone and to waste your time is always painful. We’ll always be able to look back and wonder blame ourselves for the things we didn’t do. Then on top of that, social media makes everything worse by making it so easy to compare ourselves with our peers.

“I should have done more.”
“I should have said something.”
“Why didn’t I try harder?!”

In return, this just gives us more reason to criticize ourselves. We hide from people even more, making it a vicious loop.

7) Unable to Adapt

When we are isolated for a long time, we are used to our environment. We feel very comfortable in our own bubble and place, so it might feel incredibly exhausting and out of place to have any kind of routine change.

When we have gone solo for so long, a place with a lot of people might be overwhelming. Places with too much attention might make us feel uncomfortable. We will want to withdraw back to what we were used to.

Why? because it’s comfortable.
No social pressure.
No people to deal with.
We’re not forced to talk or be put into awkward situations.

But is that really what you want?

8) Your Past Becomes Your Present And Future

Isolation locks us in our past time.

This is the same with emotional walls. The time never stops, but OUR time stops. Everything we do is the same. All our thoughts, memories, routine are all the same. Nothing changes. It’s as consistent as our annual taxes.

Our past in this sense becomes our present and our future. If we do the same things over and over, we can expect the same things. If we were dissatisfied before, we will be now and in the future too.

Take Action

I might sound like a drill sergeant right now, but this is important!
No one is coming to save you.

Not trying to be harsh.
The feeling of loneliness is an inside job.
No one can do it for you.

It’s not like we haven’t tried to surround ourselves with friends only to push them away. The feeling of loneliness stems from our first rejection of ourselves as a person. If we hate ourselves deep within, we are already pushing away the first person that is willing to be friends with us - Ourselves.

Take action and not let time waste away. We can get work done with a therapist, books, coaches, etc. There are all different ways for you to break out of isolation. If you want, you can also join me too.

- Augustus

Losing Interests, Losing Relationships [Free PDF]

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Top 5 Ways To A Confident Voice

I used to be scared of talking in front of people. Any public settings. it’s sometimes the hardest when i’m trying to talk in a group of friends.

Yea…being shy never helps.

what if i said something wrong? 
what if i said something stupid? 
what if they suddenly don’t like me anymore?

…you know what, I’m just not gonna say anything.

I wanted to share what my thoughts are, but I usually talk myself out of it.
Then because I was so much in my head, my voice is soft and squeaky. I’ll say things like

“never mind…”
“it’s nothing…”
“no, I didn’t say anything.” (when I obviously did.)
“don’t worry about it.”

If you were anything like me, it was also borderline horrifying to talk in any group more than three people.
I don’t think I was struggling with having a confident voice. I was really struggling with just having ANY voice at all.

Having a confident voice is the very basics in getting your message across. After all, we’re all trying to get better at connecting with people right?

I want to share with you five ways to enhance your voice. 


The More You Like Something, The More You Use It.

The strength, not the volume of the voice is actually more mental than you think. How confident we are in our skills determines how much we will rely on it.

If you have a car and you are kind of sure that the engine will work, will you drive it?
Of course not!

We use the things that we have confidence in, because we believe it WILL work! 

If you want that confidence with your voice, you’ll have to learn to like it first.

When you like someone, don’t you want to take an extra look at him/her? You want to be around the person. You are happy to see the person.

We move towards the things we like. 
Then the more we like it, the more we’ll use it. 
The more we use it, the more confidence we gain.

However, sometimes we will move away after we start to feel confident, because we feel like for some reason we’re too scare to mess it up. That is a great topic, but for another time.

Your voice is a representation of your inside world. You need to like your voice and feel like you deserve to use your voice.

Now, let’s do an exercise.

Exercise -

I want you to answer a question. Provide an answer and don’t explain yourself. This trains you to prove to yourself that you are fully satisfied with your answer.

Sample questions -

Why are you wearing that shirt?
Why can’t you help me with this project?
Why do you want Chinese food instead of Mexican food?


People Can’t Respond to What They Can’t Hear.

I remembered when I was shy. My voice was very soft, quiet, and close to a mutter. 

I rarely spoke. When I did speak, no one could hear me but me.
Kind of defeats the purpose of talking, but it was the best I could do.

I probably had some nice people around me, but it felt like they ignored me. Why? Because they didn’t respond to what I said. Or… more accurately, they couldn’t hear so they couldn’t respond to what I said.

Then it made me felt like I shouldn’t have said anything in the first place.

If you are going to talk, you have to make sure the other person can hear you. When we hear ourselves speak, it sounds much louder to ourselves than to others.

Raise your volume. Don’t scream, but practice to vocalize your voice. Practice speaking pass the person and to the whole room.

Yes, it is very scary to have the whole room hear your voice while you are not sure about yourself. So for starters just practice on having the volume. Grow in confidence of your voice. Feel the ability and capability of your voice. Then work on how to speak in front of people.

Yes, you can be heard & be polite. Rather if they respond or not, that’s up to them, but they can’t respond to something they didn’t hear.

Exercise - 

  1. Hum continuously while placing your hand on your chest to feel that vibration. That is part of your voice.
  2. When you are talking to someone, imagine your voice going through the person and going beyond the person. This is definitely make your voice louder.

Body Posture - Stand up straight and face forward. Don’t slouch, it narrows your diaphragm & your lungs making it more difficult to speak. 

Make sure your head is leveled and not facing downwards. It project confidence, and you don’t want people to hear your voice bouncing off the ground. Perfect practice makes perfect.
 

When You Apologize on the Inside, the Voice Shows.

Actually, when you feel sorry for yourself not only your voice shows it, the whole body shows how you feel.

found on google. i don't any copyright to this

found on google. i don't any copyright to this

Not trying to freak you out, but that’s why there is something called body language. People can usually feel what you are communicating without you even saying anything just how you act.

If I drop my head and go sit in a corner without saying anything, people would usually think I’m depressed. If I look up with my hands on my hips, people might think I’m proud.

Just simple body language stuff, but we’re only going to focus on voice right now.

If you are apologizing to people on the inside, you are looking for mistakes. 

Your mistakes. 
Then when you see them, you apologize, withdraw, or stay silent.
That’s not the best way to talk.

And believe I don’t think other people wants to talk to someone like that either.

When you’re talking normally, it makes other people feel comfortable too.

So don’t focus on mistakes.
Focus on delivering your message and making sure that it is heard. 
It will have less hesitation, more assurance.

If you are 100% certain that what you said is the truth, you can feel a sense of firmness in you voice. 

But the trick here is how can you say something with 100% certainty?

You can speak your opinion with 100% certainty!
Because you can’t be wrong about your own opinion.

Exercise -

Say the sentence “I want to be friends with you”. Do you feel any uncertainties inside of you? If you do, what is it?


Talk Like You’re the King

I love this section!

To get better at talking confidently, you can practice visualizing to talk like a king. Unleash your inner desire to be yourself. Role-play helps to bring out your other side sometimes.

You’re not a dictator, but a king where everyone loves you and whole-heartedly accepted you for who you are.

I think this is one of the reasons why The Sims game series is so popular. You can literally be the king of world. Doesn’t that sound good? What would you do?

I’ll tell you what I would do.

I would first command everyone to not laugh at me.
Then I would have everyone do this dance with me.

found on google & I don't own any copyright to this

found on google & I don't own any copyright to this

Use your imagination!

Exercise -

Pretend that you’re the king of Narnia and you have to make commands to your followers. Say the following as if you are giving an important order. -

“Bring me a cheesecake.”
“No, I actually like gold more than blue.”
“I didn’t catch that. Can you please repeat that?”


Doesn’t Matter If You’re Not Fun, Shy, Introverted or Anything, Talk Anyways!

A lot of times people say that they are introverted or shy, so they can’t improve their social skills. 

That’s OK.
But you can still improve your voice right now.

Stick to what you can improve first, which is your volume. When you start to feel comfortable with the volume of your voice, your confidence does increase too.

Right now just focus on practicing having a confident voice. When you learn and appreciate your voice, then you can start to learn to be more interesting in conversations. 

Having a solid voice helps you communicate the message effectively first, then do everything else.

Exercise - 

Sing in your car. 

First you can just turn up the volume and sing with the songs and just face your face forward, so you won’t have to make embarrassing eye contact with others. 

Then after you feel comfortable, you can start to lower the volume, so you can hear more of your voice. Pick a positive song please. Not like a depressing song about a break up or messy stuff.

If you don’t have a song, here are three from my collection, enjoy -

Happy - Pharrell Williams
Despacito ft. Luis Fonsi & Daddy Yankee - Justin Bieber [I just pretend to speak Spanish on this one.]
HandClap - Fitz and the Tantrums

Try one exercise at a time. Let me know which exercise you liked in the comment section.
Don’t feel overwhelmed. One step at a time. Small progress is realistic progress. Take care!

- Augustus

Losing Interests, Losing Relationships [Free PDF]

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  • Understanding the 5 CAUSES for an emotional wall between you and everyone else.
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