Lauren Bonvini is a Seattle-based stage fright coach who helps performers, speakers, and creatives work through performance anxiety and build confidence, presence, and self-trust.
Most people believe the best way to deal with stage fright is to avoid situations that trigger it.
If speaking up creates anxiety, they stay quiet. If presentations feel overwhelming, they avoid opportunities that require visibility. If performing or expressing themselves feels uncomfortable, they wait until they feel more confident before trying again.
At first, avoidance can feel like relief.
But over time, it usually strengthens the fear.
The nervous system learns through repetition. When people repeatedly avoid situations connected to performance anxiety, the brain begins reinforcing the belief that visibility is dangerous. The avoided situation becomes increasingly unfamiliar, emotionally charged, and intimidating.
This is why stage fright often grows over time instead of disappearing on its own.
The fear becomes less about the actual moment itself and more about the anticipation surrounding it. People begin imagining embarrassment, judgment, failure, or loss of control long before anything has even happened.
Eventually, anxiety starts shaping behavior in subtle ways.
People overprepare excessively. They second-guess their ideas. They avoid leadership opportunities, creative expression, networking, interviews, or speaking publicly. Some become highly successful while quietly carrying constant anxiety underneath their outward achievements.
The difficult part is that many people assume their anxiety means they are incapable.
But stage fright is not proof of weakness.
It is a nervous system response connected to vulnerability and perceived risk.
When attention is focused on you, the body can interpret visibility as a threat. Heart rate increases, muscles tighten, breathing changes, and thoughts become harder to organize. These reactions happen automatically because the nervous system is trying to protect you.
Understanding this changes the conversation around performance anxiety completely.
Instead of seeing fear as evidence that you should stop, you can begin seeing it as a learned response that can gradually change.
This is where exposure becomes important.
Confidence is not built by waiting for fear to disappear first. It is built through repeated experiences of showing up despite discomfort and discovering that the moment is survivable.
Small experiences matter:
- Speaking once in a meeting
- Sharing your opinion publicly
- Recording a video despite anxiety
- Returning after an uncomfortable experience
- Staying present instead of escaping mentally
These moments slowly retrain the nervous system.
Over time, visibility becomes more familiar and less threatening. The body stops reacting with the same level of intensity because it learns through experience that being seen does not automatically lead to harm.
Another important factor is self-focus.
People struggling with stage fright are often trapped in constant self-monitoring:
- How do I sound?
- What if I mess up?
- What are people thinking about me?
- What if I embarrass myself?
This inward attention creates pressure and disconnects people from authentic communication.
One of the most powerful shifts happens when focus moves outward.
Instead of trying to protect yourself from judgment, attention returns to the message you want to share, the connection you want to create, or the value you want to offer. Presence begins replacing perfectionism.
And presence is what audiences connect to most.
Perfectionism, in many cases, is one of the hidden drivers of stage fright. People believe they need to perform flawlessly in order to feel safe, respected, or accepted. But perfectionism creates rigidity and fear around mistakes.
Authentic communication requires flexibility.
The most impactful speakers, performers, and creatives are rarely perfect. They are genuine. They remain connected to themselves even when imperfections appear.
This is why overcoming stage fright is not about becoming fearless.
Fear may still exist in meaningful moments. The goal is not to eliminate every sensation of nervousness—it is to develop enough self-trust that fear no longer controls your choices.
Real confidence is built when people stop avoiding themselves.
It develops through action, repetition, nervous system regulation, and the willingness to remain present even when vulnerability exists.
And often, the moment someone stops waiting to feel perfectly ready is the moment real growth begins.
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