What If I Screw This Up?


Why Doubt Creeps In Right Before You Grow


There’s a moment — right before every major decision — when it hits.

That pause. That tightness in your chest. That flood of questions racing through your mind:

What if this doesn’t work out? What if I regret it? What if I screw it all up?

It doesn’t matter whether the decision is massive — like leaving a job, starting a business, investing in a coach — or something smaller, like finally drawing a boundary or saying no to something that’s no longer aligned.

That inner dialogue starts to speak louder. The stories surface. And suddenly, you're stuck in a spiral of doubt.

But what if I told you that moment isn’t a sign to stop — it’s a sign you’re growing?

Backing Yourself Isn’t About Certainty — It’s About Trust

Whenever you stand at the edge of something new, your nervous system lights up. Your mind floods with what-ifs. You start imagining failure. Embarrassment. Regret.

And that’s completely normal.

The way I navigate that — and what I invite you to try — is this:

Back yourself.

Not because you know exactly what’s going to happen. Not because there’s zero risk. Not because you’ve got it all figured out.

But because you trust yourself to make the most of whatever comes next.

Backing yourself is the act of saying:

"No matter what happens here, I’ll extract the value. I’ll learn the lesson. I’ll keep going."


The Real Fear? Not That You’ll Fail — But That You Won’t Survive It


Most people don’t fear the outcome itself.

They fear what they’ll make it mean about themselves if it goes wrong.

  • If the job doesn’t work out, maybe I’m not cut out for this.
  • If I leave this relationship, maybe I’ll be alone forever.
  • If I invest in coaching and don’t change overnight, maybe I’m unfixable.

But here’s what I’ve learned:

Your ability to recover is far greater than your ability to predict.

You will screw things up. We all do. But screwing something up doesn't mean you've failed — it just means you're learning in real time.

When you back yourself, you remove the pressure to get 100% of your decisions 100% right.

You give yourself the freedom to refine, redirect, and rebuild — without shame.


You Don’t Need Perfect Decisions. You Need Movement.


Say you quit a job and the next one isn’t a perfect fit. You didn’t fail — you just gathered more data.

Maybe that industry isn’t for you. Maybe that work environment doesn’t match your values.

Great. Now you know.

If it takes six misaligned roles to find the one that fits — those six weren’t mistakes.

They were stepping stones.

And that applies to careers, relationships, creative projects, everything.

It’s not about being right.

It’s about being in motion.


Doubt Lives at the Fence Line


Imagine your life like a large paddock, bordered by a fence. Inside the paddock, everything feels familiar — comfortable, even.

But when you start walking toward the edge of your known world — toward that metaphorical fence — that’s when the stories start.

"You can’t do this." "What if you fail?" "Who do you think you are?"

These stories exist to keep you within your current boundaries.

But here’s the truth: they lose their power the moment you step past the fence.

Because once you're outside of what's familiar, your growth catches up with your fear.

And those stories? They don’t follow you.

They stay behind, guarding a version of you that no longer exists.


Control the Controllables


You can’t control outcomes.

You can’t control how long things take.

You can’t control other people’s responses.

But you can control how you show up.

You can control the narrative you feed yourself.

You can control whether or not you extract value from the experience.

Let that be your anchor.


Let Me Say It Plainly


You will not make perfect decisions.

There is no such thing.

The perfect decision is the one you commit to and learn from.

Anyone who has ever done something meaningful — in business, relationships, or personal growth — has doubted themselves.

But the difference is, they backed themselves anyway.

Even when it felt shaky.

Even when the outcome wasn’t guaranteed.

Even when all they had was hope and effort.


So Here’s Your Invitation


If you’re standing at the edge of a decision — feeling the noise of your inner critic, feeling the pressure to get it right — take a breath.

Then make the move.

Back yourself.

Not because it’s safe.

Not because it’s easy.

But because you trust that, whatever happens, you’ll meet yourself there.

And the version of you that emerges on the other side?

They’re stronger than you realise.

And they’ve been waiting.

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Giorgio Genaus - Mindset Mentor & Coach
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