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Believing in Yourself

Believing in Yourself

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What does it really mean to believe in yourself? And when does that belief become the very thing that gets in your way?

In this episode

Self-belief is one of the most talked about qualities in sport and in life. But what actually is it? And why does telling someone to "just believe in yourself" so often miss the mark entirely?

In this episode, three depth psychologists, one of them a former World Cup soccer player, sit down to explore one of the most nuanced psychological balancing acts a person can face. Not just how to build self-belief, but how to hold it lightly enough that it stays alive, honest, and genuinely useful.

The conversation moves between the soccer field and the inner life, between mythology and the nervous system, between Messi sensing destiny in the 2022 World Cup final and a young drummer who discovered that loving something and being talented at it are not always the same thing.

What you will hear:

  • The difference between self-belief, self-confidence, self-efficacy, and self-concept. Why they are related but not the same, and why the distinction matters.
  • Why telling someone to believe in themselves is often not only unhelpful but can make things worse. And what actually works instead.
  • The role of the mentor. How a single person seeing something in you can unlock a freedom that no amount of internal pep talk can reach. John shares how Jan Wouters at Ajax changed the trajectory of his career simply by believing in him first.
  • How self-belief connects to inner authority. The ability to make choices that are in alignment with your own nature rather than living by the rules of an outer authority.
  • Why the shadow matters here. The parts of yourself you prefer to keep hidden have a way of undermining self-belief from beneath. You cannot fully believe in yourself while hiding from yourself.
  • The myth of Icarus. What happens when belief tips into grandiosity, when the cheering of the stadium, the praise of the agent, and the worship of the crowd convinces a player they no longer need to do the defensive work.
  • The placebo effect as a reality-creating principle. Why what you believe about the future actually shapes what becomes possible.
  • Messi and the sense of destiny. The difference between trying to believe and simply knowing. And whether that kind of knowing can be cultivated or only received.
  • The practical wisdom of chunking. You do not need to believe you will win the whole tournament. You only need to believe you can beat the next team. You do not need to believe you will write a great book. You only need to believe you can write the first chapter.

One insight that stays:

Self-belief is not a destination. It is not something you achieve once and then check off. It is an art. And like all art, it needs practice, joy, and a willingness to keep showing up without a guarantee of how it will turn out.

The question we leave you with:

Think of something that truly matters to you. What would you do differently if you genuinely believed you could?

We would love to hear your answer. Share it with us at hello@thegoldenball.fm

About the hosts

John O'Brien is a former World Cup soccer player and sports psychologist who combines performance tools with sand, symbols, and imagination to help athletes and others perform and understand themselves more deeply. johnobriensportpsych.com

Machiel Klerk is a psychotherapist, founder of Jung Platform, and lifelong lover of the game. machielklerk.com

Akke-Jeanne Klerk is a personal development coach, teacher, and co-founder of Jung Platform. akkejeanneklerk.com

The Golden Ball — where depth psychology and soccer help us play life better.



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