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The science of stage fright (and how to overcome it) - Mikael Cho

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    Palms sweaty,
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    heart racing,
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    stomach in knots.
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    You can't cry for help.
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    Not only is your throat
    too tight to breathe,
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    but it'd be so embarrassing.
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    No, you aren't being stalked by a monster,
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    you're speaking in public,
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    a fate some deem worse than death.
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    See, when you're dead, you feel nothing;
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    at a podium, you feel stage fright.
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    But at some point
    we've all had to communicate
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    in front of people,
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    so you have to try and overcome it.
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    To start, understand what stage fright is.
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    Humans, social animals that we are,
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    are wired to worry about reputation.
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    Public speaking can threaten it.
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    Before a speech, you fret,
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    "What if people think I'm
    awful and I'm an idiot?"
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    That fear of being seen as an awful idiot
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    is a threat reaction
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    from a primitive part of your brain
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    that's very hard to control.
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    It's the fight or flight response,
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    a self-protective process
    seen in a range of animals,
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    most of which don't give speeches.
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    But we have a wise partner
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    in the study of freaking out.
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    Charles Darwin tested fight or flight
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    at the London Zoo snake exhibit.
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    He wrote in his diary,
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    "My will and reason were powerless
    against the imagination of a danger
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    which had never been experienced."
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    He concluded that his response
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    was an ancient reaction unaffected
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    by the nuances of modern civilization.
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    So, to your conscious modern mind,
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    it's a speech.
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    To the rest of your brain,
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    built up to code
    with the law of the jungle,
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    when you perceive
    the possible consequences
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    of blowing a speech,
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    it's time to run for your life
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    or fight to the death.
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    Your hypothalamus, common
    to all vertebrates,
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    triggers your pituitary gland to secrete
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    the hormone ACTH,
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    making your adrenal gland
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    shoot adrenaline into your blood.
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    Your neck and back tense up, you slouch.
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    Your legs and hand shake
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    as your muscles prepare for attack.
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    You sweat.
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    Your blood pressure jumps.
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    Your digestion shuts down
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    to maximize the delivery of nutrients
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    and oxygen to muscles and vital organs,
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    so you get dry mouth, butterflies.
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    Your pupils dilate,
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    it's hard to read anything up close,
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    like your notes,
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    but long range is easy.
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    That's how stage fright works.
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    How do we fight it?
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    First, perspective.
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    This isn't all in your head.
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    It's a natural, hormonal,
    full body reaction
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    by an autonomic nervous
    system on autopilot.
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    And genetics play a huge
    role in social anxiety.
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    John Lennon played live
    thousands of times.
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    Each time he vomited beforehand.
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    Some people are just wired
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    to feel more scared performing in public.
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    Since stage fright
    is natural and inevitable,
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    focus on what you can control.
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    Practice a lot,
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    starting long before
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    in an environment similar
    to the real performance.
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    Practicing any task
    increases your familiarity
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    and reduces anxiety,
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    so when it's time to speak in public,
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    you're confident in yourself
    and the task at hand.
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    Steve Jobs rehearsed his epic speeches
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    for hundreds of hours,
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    starting weeks in advance.
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    If you know what you're saying,
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    you'll feed off the crowd's energy
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    instead of letting your hypothalamus
    convince your body it's about to be lunch
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    for a pack of predators.
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    But hey, the vertebrate hypothalamus
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    has had millions of years
    more practice than you.
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    Just before you go on stage,
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    it's time to fight dirty
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    and trick your brain.
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    Stretch your arms up and breath deeply.
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    This makes your hypothalamus trigger
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    a relaxation response.
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    Stage fright usually hits hardest
    right before a presentation,
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    so take that last minute
    to stretch and breathe.
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    You approach the Mic, voice clear,
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    body relaxed.
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    Your well-prepared speech
    convinces the wild crowd
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    you're a charismatic genius.
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    How?
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    You didn't overcome stage fright,
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    you adapted to it.
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    And to the fact that no matter
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    how civilized you may seem,
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    in part of your brain,
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    you're still a wild animal,
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    a profound, well-spoken wild animal.
Title:
The science of stage fright (and how to overcome it) - Mikael Cho
Speaker:
Mikael Cho
Description:

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/the-science-of-stage-fright-and-how-to-overcome-it-mikael-cho

Heart racing, palms sweating, labored breathing? No, you're not having a heart attack -- it's stage fright! If speaking in public makes you feel like you're fighting for your life, you're not alone. But the better you understand your body's reaction, the more likely you are to overcome it. Mikael Cho advises how to trick your brain and steal the show.

Lesson by Mikael Cho, animation by KAWPA Studioworks.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:08
  • The English transcript was updated on 12/22/2015. A technical timing error was fixed.

English subtitles

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