Confidence
Building Self-Belief Through Disability Leadership
Confidence is not about being fearless. Confidence is about believing that your voice matters, your experience has value, and your contribution can make a difference.
For many disabled people, confidence can be affected by barriers, low expectations, exclusion or being spoken for instead of listened to. Disability Leadership NZ encourages disabled people to rebuild confidence through knowledge, self-advocacy, personal growth and lived experience.
Confidence Starts With Knowing Your Value
Disabled people bring insight, strength, creativity, resilience and problem-solving skills into families, workplaces, communities and leadership spaces. Confidence grows when people recognise these strengths and begin to trust their own voice.
Ways to Build Confidence
Speak Up
Confidence grows when you practise sharing your thoughts, asking questions and expressing your needs.
Know Your Rights
Understanding your rights can help you feel stronger when making decisions or advocating for support.
Start Small
Leadership does not need to begin with big actions. Small steps can build courage and direction.
Learn From Others
Disabled leaders, advocates and role models can show what is possible and inspire new confidence.
Use Your Experience
Lived experience is powerful. Your story may help improve services, influence change or encourage others.
Keep Growing
Confidence develops over time through practice, learning, mistakes, success and persistence.
Your Voice Matters
You do not need to be perfect to be confident. You do not need a title to be a leader. Confidence begins when you believe that your ideas, choices and lived experience deserve to be respected.
Every time you speak up, take part, learn something new or support another person, you are building leadership.
