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Humility doesn't mean downplaying everything good about yourself. And if you keep doing that long enough, your own mind will start to believe it.
Show NotesIn this episode of Shark Theory, Baylor breaks down the dangerous misunderstanding many people have about humility and why false humility slowly erodes confidence.
For years, we've been taught that being humble means deflecting compliments, minimizing accomplishments, and acting like nothing we do really matters. Baylor explains why that mindset doesn't make you humble, it makes you invisible to yourself.
When you constantly say "it's no big deal," your mind eventually believes it. Motivation fades. Pride in your work disappears. And what started as trying to be a good person quietly turns into self-sabotage.
Baylor also draws a clear line between bending over backwards and being walked on. Too often, people justify unhealthy behavior in the name of humility, not realizing they're teaching others how to treat them.
True humility isn't pretending you're bad at what you do. It's knowing you've put in the work and owning that with quiet confidence. It's believing in your ability without exaggeration, and accepting recognition without guilt.
One of the simplest but hardest lessons in this episode is learning to receive a compliment. Sometimes the most confident thing you can say is "thank you." Not deflecting it. Not minimizing it. Just accepting it.
Baylor challenges listeners to stop shrinking themselves, to acknowledge their effort, and to become better at both giving and receiving encouragement.
What You'll Learn in This EpisodeWhy fake humility damages confidence over time
How downplaying yourself rewires your own mindset
The difference between humility and being walked on
Why accepting compliments matters more than you think
How confidence and humility can coexist
Why learning to say "thank you" is a growth skill
"Humility isn't pretending you're not good at what you do. It's knowing you've put in the work and owning it."
By Baylor Barbee5
4242 ratings
Humility doesn't mean downplaying everything good about yourself. And if you keep doing that long enough, your own mind will start to believe it.
Show NotesIn this episode of Shark Theory, Baylor breaks down the dangerous misunderstanding many people have about humility and why false humility slowly erodes confidence.
For years, we've been taught that being humble means deflecting compliments, minimizing accomplishments, and acting like nothing we do really matters. Baylor explains why that mindset doesn't make you humble, it makes you invisible to yourself.
When you constantly say "it's no big deal," your mind eventually believes it. Motivation fades. Pride in your work disappears. And what started as trying to be a good person quietly turns into self-sabotage.
Baylor also draws a clear line between bending over backwards and being walked on. Too often, people justify unhealthy behavior in the name of humility, not realizing they're teaching others how to treat them.
True humility isn't pretending you're bad at what you do. It's knowing you've put in the work and owning that with quiet confidence. It's believing in your ability without exaggeration, and accepting recognition without guilt.
One of the simplest but hardest lessons in this episode is learning to receive a compliment. Sometimes the most confident thing you can say is "thank you." Not deflecting it. Not minimizing it. Just accepting it.
Baylor challenges listeners to stop shrinking themselves, to acknowledge their effort, and to become better at both giving and receiving encouragement.
What You'll Learn in This EpisodeWhy fake humility damages confidence over time
How downplaying yourself rewires your own mindset
The difference between humility and being walked on
Why accepting compliments matters more than you think
How confidence and humility can coexist
Why learning to say "thank you" is a growth skill
"Humility isn't pretending you're not good at what you do. It's knowing you've put in the work and owning it."

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