快好知 kuaihz

健康:5 Tips for Becoming a More Confident Public Spe

标题:5 Tips for Becoming a More Confident Public Speaker

作者: AVERIL LINN

原文链接:http://www.pickthebrain.com/blog/5-tips-becoming-confident-public-speaker/

翻译请保留原文链接哦↑

翻译小伙伴,可评论『领稿』,并把已完成的译文『发在自己的心理圈』or『个人主页』的日志内。请领稿的小伙伴,尽量在一个星期内完成翻译,谢谢!!

I used to be terrified of public speaking.

In my mid-20s, I was involved with the research and development team at my work, and was supposed to attend conferences to present the research I was involved in. But the thought of standing up in front of so many people and speaking caused me so much anxiety that I couldn’t go. While the rest of the team flew off around the country, I stayed back at the office. Not a good look, and not a good career move.

Fast forward eight years later, and I now speak in front of groups all the time. I’ll be real – I’m not 100% calm right before I do public speaking these days, but the amount of nervousness I feel is manageable enough that I can still get up and do it. So what changed?

Most importantly: I desensitized slowly, and consistently.

In my next job, the entire role revolved around speaking in front of small groups of up to ten every single day – delivering cognitive behavior therapy group programmes. There was no magic that allowed me to do it – I was still extremely nervous at first, but wanting the job gave me the motivation to try.

Here’s the deal – if you want to make progress with your public speaking confidence, you can’t wait until you feel more confident before you start. The confidence will come afterwards. Find an opportunity to speak to groups regularly, starting with a smaller group and working your way up. Is there an avenue for you to present a report at your weekly team meeting? Deliver some training to new employees? Speak to groups of students about your workplace?

I learned that nothing terrible happened.

The next most important thing was this – with time and experience, I discovered that nothing terrible happened. Even if I had a mind blank or muddled my words on occasion, I was able to keep going, I didn’t die, and it really didn’t matter the next day. This taught my brain that it isn’t necessary to get so anxious before I have to speak because the likelihood of total annihilation is really pretty small – but this doesn’t work on just an intellectual level. You can tell yourself there’s nothing to be afraid of, or imagine the audience in their underwear, or any of those usual public speaking tricks, but your brain won’t fall for that. Like any phobia, you will only learn to be less afraid when you repeatedly experience  the feared situation without something bad happening. Combined with speaking regularly, this learning reduced the amount of anxiety I experienced dramatically over time.

I found out that everyone gets nervous.

It doesn’t matter how long you’ve been doing it, nearly everyone feels those nerves before having to speak in front of others. It’s a normal, natural fear to be concerned about how we are going to come across to others. Speaking in front of others opens us up to judgment, so of course we feel vulnerable. The great thing is, you can feel nervous, and do it anyway. That’s what everyone else is doing! Your feelings don’t have to have the final say in your actions.

I discovered that my nerves don’t show as much as I feel them.

In most instances, we appear far less anxious to others than we feel. Our outsides rarely match our insides. Consider point #3– most people you have seen speak were feeling nervous, but did you actually see it? Usually not, though occasionally there’s a shaky hand or a wobbly voice. But even if we notice those little trembles, it’s not the main things that stands out to us. We’re there to focus on and process whatever information we are receiving, not worry about how the speaker looks or feels.

I experienced that my nerves decreased as I was speaking.

My nerves before public speaking usually follow a sharp bell curve, even now. Up to about five minutes beforehand, I feel absolutely fine. I think that I’m getting away with it – this time I’m not going to be nervous! I’m finally over it! Then, five minutes before I have to speak, the nerves kick in. They peak right as I stand up. And then magically, after a minute or two of talking, they start to decrease. My focus shifts from myself and my butterflies to the message I am trying to get across.

The take-home message is this: If you want to build your confidence in public speaking, you have to go out and do some. You will be nervous, because everyone is. It will get better the more you do it though, so accepting this and getting through the initial nerve-wracking talks will send you on the way to speaking more comfortably in time.

—–

Averil Linn’s mission is to make mental wellbeing something we talk about as easily as physical health. She writes from a background in psychology and behavior change over at her site This Short Life.

本站资源来自互联网,仅供学习,如有侵权,请通知删除,敬请谅解!
搜索建议:Confident  Confident词条  Becoming  Becoming词条  Public  Public词条  健康  健康词条  Tips  Tips词条  
综合

 每个人都有一颗骚动但孤独的心

孤独就像是我们身上的某个器官,它会一直伴随着我们。很多人因为孤独而上路,想寻找一方心灵的净土,好让自己孤独的心灵得到排解。但他们都好像无一例外地越行走越孤寂,最...(展开)

综合

 5个受用一生的心理寓言故事

五个寓言故事:关于成长、行动、放弃、逃避、亲密。富有意义的主题和心理点评,在每一个简单的故事中体现。一、成长的寓言:做一棵永远成长的苹果树一棵苹果树,终于结果了...(展开)

综合

 我不能悲伤地坐在你身旁

爱情中你们遇到过哪些困难呢?如果横在你们之间的坎是一线生死,那你该怎么办?死生契阔,与子成说;执子之手,与子偕老。我想,我不能悲伤地坐在你身旁。就算命运蹂躏,也...(展开)