I used to HATE public speaking. My heart would race. My hands would shake.
I’d be smiling but inside I’d be thinking “I’m not good enough” “people don’t think I belong up here” “if only I spent more time preparing” — the negative self talk was wild.
I eventually got over it.
In this article are 5 game-changing strategies that helped me overcome my fear and find confidence on stage.

Table of Contents
Nerves as Energy
I stopped saying “I’m nervous” and started saying “I’m excited.” Same feeling, different story.
This simple mental shift transforms anxiety into anticipation, turning your body’s natural response into fuel rather than a roadblock.
Pause Power
Silence feels longer to you than to the audience. But it makes you look confident and in control.
That pause before speaking isn’t awkward — it’s powerful. Use it to your advantage.
Eyes on Allies
I scan the room and lock in on the people nodding. Speak to them first, momentum follows.
These visual cues become your anchor points, building confidence as you see positive engagement spreading through the audience.
Stories > Stats
Nobody remembers your bullet points. They remember the moment you made them feel something.
Stories create connection where statistics create distance. Lead with narrative, support with facts.
Reps Beat Talent
The only real cure for fear of speaking is doing it… again, and again, and again. Reps beat talent every time.
Each speaking opportunity builds the muscle memory that transforms terror into confidence.
Conclusion
Now? I still have moments of anxiety but when you nail it the energy is intoxicating.
The rush of connecting with an audience, of sharing your message and watching it land — there’s nothing quite like it.
If you hate public speaking, don’t write yourself off.
Try these shifts — they were a game changer for me:
- Reframe nerves as energy: say “I’m excited” instead of “I’m nervous”
- Pause before speaking: silence makes you look confident and in control
- Eyes on allies: find the nodding faces and speak to them first
- Stories > stats: make people feel something, they’ll remember you
- Reps beat talent: the only cure for fear is doing it again and again
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