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Inheritance of confidence
Inheritance of confidence
The Female Voice
Friday, September 26, 2025 by Nomsa Mbuli

 

When we speak of inheritance, we often think of property, jewellery or family recipes passed down through generations. Though, there is another inheritance, less visible yet more powerful, that shapes our lives: The inheritance of confidence.

Confidence is not something you simply wake up with one day. It is planted in you or denied to you, from childhood. It is shaped by the words spoken around you, the encouragement (or criticism) you receive and the examples set by those who raise you. For many women, the story of confidence is not one of abundance, but of scarcity. Additionally, this scarcity, this inheritance of hesitation, echoes loudly in adulthood - influencing everything, from careers to relationships to self-worth.

Think of a girl who is constantly told to ‘be careful’, ‘don’t speak too loudly’ or ‘leave the big decisions to others’.  She grows up cautious, second-guessing herself and doubting her ability to lead. Compare her to a boy who is told to ‘go for it’, you’ll figure it out’ or ‘you’re destined for greatness’. He enters adulthood with a sense of entitlement to space, to leadership, to opportunity. Both children inherit not just their family names, but scripts for how they will carry themselves in the world.

By the time we reach womanhood, the absence of confidence can quietly dictate our choices. It is why many women settle for jobs they are overqualified for, simply because they don’t believe they can negotiate for more. It is why some remain silent in meetings, even when they have the right answer or avoid applying for positions, unless they meet every single requirement. Confidence, or the lack of it, can determine whether a woman raises her hand, starts her own business, leaves a toxic relationship or dares to dream bigger.

Yet, this inheritance is not always deliberate. Many mothers, themselves raised under patriarchy, handed down their insecurities without even realising it. They discouraged their daughters from being ‘too bold’ not out of malice, but out of protection - fearing that society punishes outspoken women. They passed on caution as love, modesty as virtue and silence as survival. What they could not always pass down was the freedom to take up space.

The effect, however, is real. A grown woman with shaky confidence often second-guesses her every step. She may compare herself relentlessly to others, waiting for validation, rather than trusting her own instincts. She might hesitate to leave a stable but unfulfilling job because she doubts her ability to succeed elsewhere. She may remain in unhealthy relationships because she has internalised the belief that she is not worthy of more. Lack of confidence becomes a cage, invisible but unyielding.

However, here lies the hope: Inheritance can be rewritten. Just as we inherit traits, we can also choose what to pass on. A woman who recognises the gap in her own confidence has the power to stop the cycle with her daughters, nieces, students or mentees. She can model a different script, one that says, ‘Your voice matters’, ‘You are capable’ and ‘You don’t need permission to shine’.

Building confidence is not about arrogance; it is about grounding. It is teaching girls to trust their abilities, to fail without shame and to know that they are worthy of leadership, love and respect. Also, for women who never received this inheritance, it is about reclaiming it as adults; by taking risks, surrounding themselves with affirming voices and daring to step into spaces where they once felt unworthy.

Imagine the ripple effect if every woman began to consciously pass down confidence instead of caution. Imagine girls raised to believe not only in their potential, but in their right to pursue it boldly. Confidence is contagious, generational and transformative.

So, the question becomes: What will you pass on? Will it be silence and hesitation or courage and self-belief? Will your daughters inherit the weight of ‘not enough’, or the wings of ‘I am capable’?

The inheritance of confidence is the greatest gift we can give, to ourselves and to the women who come after us. When women carry confidence, the choices they make are no longer rooted in fear. They are rooted in freedom.

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