Archer Sloan’s “Demonic Confidence” is a unique and intensive self-improvement program designed to help individuals build unshakeable confidence and assertiveness. The course employs unconventional and bold techniques to empower participants to overcome fear, eliminate self-doubt, and assert themselves more effectively in various situations. Through a combination of practical exercises, mindset training, and confidence-boosting strategies, you’ll learn how to project a powerful presence, communicate with conviction, and achieve your personal and professional goals with newfound confidence. This course is ideal for those looking to make a dramatic transformation in their self-confidence and assertiveness.
Description
The “Demonic Confidence” program teaches you how to build self-confidence in 21 days. It shows you how to eliminate the fear of approaching women. It was created to mimic the mechanics of behavior formation, thereby developing new behaviors and beliefs through experience.
Self Help – Self Help online course
More information about Self Help:
Self-help or self-improvement is a self-guided improvement—economically, intellectually, or emotionally—often with a substantial psychological basis.
Many different self-help group programs exist, each with its own focus, techniques, associated beliefs, proponents and in some cases, leaders.
Concepts and terms originating in self-help culture and Twelve-Step culture, such as recovery, dysfunctional families, and codependency have become firmly integrated in mainstream language.
Self-help often utilizes publicly available information or support groups, on the Internet as well as in person, where people in similar situations join together.
From early examples in self-driven legal practice and home-spun advice, the connotations of the word have spread and often apply particularly to education, business,
psychology and psychotherapy, commonly distributed through the popular genre of self-help books.
According to the APA Dictionary of Psychology, potential benefits of self-help groups that professionals may not be able to provide include friendship,
emotional support, experiential knowledge, identity, meaningful roles, and a sense of belonging.