seeXnoXmore
New member
I did this program in high school. It was an anti bullying sorta thing. yes, we all though we were changing the world one kid at a time. Ha! Anyway, some of the 'confidence building' techniques we learned was really simple. it was simply saying 'i like myself'. it got laughs out of everyone involved. you throw your hands in the air and yell as loud as you can, "i like myself" like...3 times. or how ever long it took to get either everyone a) rolling their eyes, or b)laughing their butts off. (hmm, in retrospect perhaps THIS is the weight loss secret...)
From high school I took a year of college, and during a practicum of sorts, we were doing presentations to kids. I went up in front of the couple hundred and attempted to get everyone excited. Looking like an idiot, I threw my hands in the air and encouraged the preteens to do the same. At one point, from my view on the stage, I noticed a handful of kids to the left not doing anything. So I sauntered over in all my 18 year old coolness, and fell right on my butt. In front of everyone.
Let's just say it's a good thing I find humour in every situation.
Let's just say that was the one time on stage I wasn't worried if everyone was thinking I was fat. And really, I'm not. Deep rooted self confidence issues. For being 5 9, I was closer to 190 pounds. So not necessarily Miss Universe, but not Miss Piggy either.
I think at that point is when I started realizing I wasn't giving people enough credit. Blindly I assumed everyone could only look at me and think "She shouldn't be wearing that." or "Oh my, Gerald, she ate again." (I don't know anyone named Gerald, but I imagine a woman named Beatrice saying that sentence. Hmm.)
Welcome to the new life. Enjoy my words. Call me Cat. Everyone else does.
From high school I took a year of college, and during a practicum of sorts, we were doing presentations to kids. I went up in front of the couple hundred and attempted to get everyone excited. Looking like an idiot, I threw my hands in the air and encouraged the preteens to do the same. At one point, from my view on the stage, I noticed a handful of kids to the left not doing anything. So I sauntered over in all my 18 year old coolness, and fell right on my butt. In front of everyone.
Let's just say it's a good thing I find humour in every situation.
Let's just say that was the one time on stage I wasn't worried if everyone was thinking I was fat. And really, I'm not. Deep rooted self confidence issues. For being 5 9, I was closer to 190 pounds. So not necessarily Miss Universe, but not Miss Piggy either.
I think at that point is when I started realizing I wasn't giving people enough credit. Blindly I assumed everyone could only look at me and think "She shouldn't be wearing that." or "Oh my, Gerald, she ate again." (I don't know anyone named Gerald, but I imagine a woman named Beatrice saying that sentence. Hmm.)
Welcome to the new life. Enjoy my words. Call me Cat. Everyone else does.
Not too unhealthy of an addiction all things considered.