Public Speaking: A Fear Worse Than Death

Ask anyone to rank their fears, and an overwhelming number of people rate public speaking as their ultimate fear — bypassing spiders, a tax audit, or second Trump term.
The concept of standing in front of a group — all eyes on you, everyone quiet and listening to you — is daunting. To be the focus ; even the simple concept of being the only person in the room to be doing something different (standing and speaking) while all others are quiet and sitting is enough to alienate you and make you feel as though you’re floating on an iceberg by yourself.
I too, had a large fear of public speaking at one time. My involvement with the telephony community (I voice telephone prompts as my main career when I’m not coaching) led to me being asked to speak at various technology conferences. Even though this is a community which I know well (and who hire me and who are big fans of my work, I might add), I was still consumed by fear of getting up and speaking. All sorts of negative tapes played in my head: “Everyone here is so expert. I am non-technical. What do I have to contribute to their knowledge base?” “It’s a largely male audience. They’re not going to think I’m credible.” And most defeating: “I’m a fraud and they know it.”
I worked with a career coach who pointed out a few obvious things to me — and the mere act of making me aware of these points re-routed the circuitry in my thinking about getting up and speaking. Her key three takeaways?
You’re Meant to be There
They asked you to speak. They added you to their roster of speakers. They put you on the podium. And they didn’t do all that because you submitted your talk first, or they liked the font you chose for your proposal. Or because nobody else applied to speak. They chose you. That alone should be enough to relax you and make you feel as though you should be there. Because you should.
You Are an Expert On Your Topic
If I was asked to speak at an ophthalmology conference about retinal surgery, I’d be out of my element. I have no expertise in that area, and anything I said would be a complete improv. And I’d also be terrified out of my mind, and relying completely on a written “script”, rather than speaking from a knowledge base. My thinking changed (thanks to the coach) when I realized: I know all about telephone prompts and how to design better call flow — because I voice those kind of prompts all day every day. I’m an expert at that. I don’t know anything about the technical features of VoIP gateways or any of the other technical telephony stuff — that’s why they get the other guys to speak. I know my material. Suddenly, nerves gave way to enthusiasm about what I was speaking on.
They’re Quiet and Looking at You Because You’re Doing What You Should Be Doing
The idea of standing in front of a group and talking to them is alone enough to rattle people. We’re largely uncomfortable having that kind of focus on us. It’s a lot of responsibility to “carry the conversation” and hold the interest of everyone attending your talk. The resounding silence of an entire room of people listening to you is intimidating. But that very act of everyone’s silence — and them looking at you — is proof that you’re engaging them, and that you’re doing your job.
I went from stage fright to applying to speak at as many conferences as would have me, just with that re-routing of my thoughts. If you’re speaking on a topic you know and are passionate about, I predict nothing will be able to hold you back.
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