Business Fit Magazine March 2019 Issue 2 | Page 16

Business Conquer the Public Speaking Fear #1: Being Judged (or The Ridiculous Fear of Being Judged) Minue Yoshida I’ve been a Public Speaker for many years now, when I have a microphone in my hand and hundreds of people in the audience, is when I feel I am at my best. I really like the stress that inundates our bodies when we have to get on stage, the butterflies in the stomach when we have the spotlight, the pounding of our chest with our hearts ready to leave our bodies the seconds before we have to speak, when everyone is silent…just waiting for us to start. Would you believe it if I told you that I am naturally shy and that if you run a battery of psychological tests, I will end up being “an introvert”? You better believe it! It’s all true. And I want on record the fact that I am not pretending anything when I am on the platform. I am NOT being someone else, I do not have “the impostor syndrome”. Oh, and that saying I’ve heard so many times “fake it till you make it” is something I strongly advice my clients NEVER to do. I exchange it for “keep working on it, until you make it”, because then it’s real. I am a Public Speaking Coach. I became one because my friends saw the change in me and gave me the idea that I could teach others how I made it. The people around me saw my transformation, when it wasn’t clear to me. And I decided to share with the world everything I’ve learned, to become a confident public speaker, because I am completely convinced that everyone can do it. Nobody is born with “greatness in public speaking” in their genes! It’s all about a set of skills that you learn, practice, master and then enjoy. Yes, it seems easy, but it is not. Do you know that people have mentioned before that they’d rather have root canal than to speak in public? Oh wait, I have another one! There are polls that indicate that people would rather die than speak in public (source: psychologytoday. com). Also, in a study conducted in the USA in 2014, Public Speaking occupied the number one fear among Americans. (source: TheWashingtonPost.com). When I ask people in my workshops “why are you afraid?” and we dig deep into it, there is always something they share: the fear of being judged. However, being judged itself has no meaning or connotation. We all judge, all the time! We do that as humans. Our parents judge us when 16 we were growing up, our partners are judging us all the time, I am judging the driver behind me, and I bet you are judging me now. Judging itself is something we do as humans, because we can only perceive the world through our lenses and filters. We can only give meaning through our perception and the interpretation we allocate to words, actions, and experiences. So, if we are afraid of something that we are doing anyway, and It’s all about a set of skills that you learn, practice, master and then enjoy. 17