Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Performance Anxiety

A friend recently expressed a desire to understand what her children are going through when they experience stage fright so that she can better help them.  Her eldest (the same age as my K) is deeply shy, not even liking to ask for what she wants in a restaurant (K is the same way) and my friend has concerns about this girl being able to survive in the world on her own one day.  But what prompted the query was that her outgoing youngest, who has never minded being the focus of attention in the past, had a meltdown before her piano recital.

How to explain performance anxiety to someone who does not experience it herself . . .

I think the most important thing to understand is that there is no answer to the questions “Why are they going through this?” or “What, exactly, are they afraid of?”  There is no REASON that it happens; it is INSTINCT, it is Fight or Flight.  Some aspect of the situation is perceived in some deep recess of the brain as a threat, and by the time it has escalated to the point that another person knows that something is going on, it is Adrenaline and Cortisol and Stress and there is nothing, in that moment, that anyone can do to make it better.  Chances are good that anything said that actually gets through will only make it worse.

That’s the bad news: it isn’t rational, so you don’t get to understand it, and from outside there isn’t anything to do to help.

The good news is that it can be overcome.  But it’s up to the person with the anxiety, and it doesn’t happen over night.

Remember “round robin” reading in school, when every student would get a turn reading a paragraph out loud in class?  Yeah, that brought on full-blown panic attacks for me.  Every.  Time.  There was no “reason” for it.  I was a strong reader.  I was articulate.  (I mean, for crying out loud, it’s what I DO now.)  But some aspect of the situation was perceived as a threat.  Maybe it was the memory of another kid being snickered at when s/he stumbled over a simple word, or the thought of everyone listening or judging or – who knows? It was never a specific thing I was consciously afraid of.  It would start with a generally anxious feeling whenever it was clear that was today’s plan for that class.  As the reading turn wended its way through the classroom, my pulse would quicken.  When the row before mine was reading, I’d count how many people would read before me and count ahead in the reading and scan the paragraph I thought would be mine and struggle to keep my breathing under control as I double-checked the counts and re-read it and still tried to keep track of what was being read now and the blood would be rushing through my ears as the teacher would ask someone with a short paragraph to read a second one . . . and the counting would begin again.  By the time it was two people before me you could literally see my heart beating through two sweaters, not to mention the sweat trickling down my back and soaking through my pits or the fact that my hands were shaking so much turning the page in our textbook was out of the question.

That was sitting at my desk when everyone else was looking at their own books.  Imagine what presentations were like.  Pure hell.  Somehow I survived them.  In freshman lit my “5-6” minute book report babbled on for 21 minutes.  In chemistry, my research was on the “chemistry of emotions,” and I got a laugh (and some sympathetic looks) when I said, by way of introduction, that the chemicals in my brain were telling me I’d be much safer if I crawled under the teacher’s desk.  In speech class I managed to demonstrate “how to put a clarinet together” despite the violent shaking of my hands; it wasn’t graceful, but it happened.

What helped?  For me, it was doing things by degrees (slowly conditioning whatever part in my noggin to see the situation as less of a threat).  In jr. high and high school (running chronologically parallel to the above stories) I was in band and choir.  It was performance, but it was much-rehearsed and I was never on stage alone.  When I got to college, my education degree had speech requirements; two semesters worth.  For the first, I opted to take “Interpersonal Communication” in place of the “stand up in front of people and give a speech” class.  For the second, I opted for “Oral Interpretation” in place of the “more advanced stand up in front of people and give a speech” class – and this one was the life changer.

Oral Interpretation was in the theater department.  The teacher was nice, the class was small, and all the other people in it were friendly.  We chose our own readings from different genres of literature (poetry, short story, a scene from a play).  We were encouraged to adopt personae and use different voices for different characters.  We had to write up an analysis of the piece, work on it at home, and workshop the piece in class before “performing” it for a grade.  It wasn’t too torturous . . . it was . . . kind of . . . fun!

So I signed up for Acting One the next semester, but my course load was too heavy and I ended up dropping it then.  Later, I auditioned for Community Theater.  In my first play I had no lines, I carried the lamp for Desdemona.  In my second play, I was the lead.  I pulled out my hill-billy accent and we rehearsed a LOT and by the time performance came it wasn’t really me up there, as I was pretending to be someone else -- so *I* wasn’t threatened so the panic attacks didn’t happen.  (Eventually I did go back and take Acting One . . . and Two and Three, but later in life).

For me, “putting on a persona” helps.  When I taught, I played the “teacher” role.  Job interview?  Put on the “competent employee” hat.  Sure I still get nervous in those situations, but it no longer escalates the way it used to.  I’m still not volunteering to stand up and give speeches, but I’ll read other peoples’ words till the cows come home.

CAUTION: forcing your introverted child to do Community Theater will probably backfire, and send any progress toward panic control backward about 5 years (I almost sub-titled this post "Why I Don't Force My Child to Speak to People").  My exact path isn’t going to work for anyone but me, but I’ll share some other things I’ve learned.

K and I went to a talk by Jill Bolte Taylor about the teenage brain a few weeks back.  From her we learned that from the time you have a thought to the time that forms an emotion to the time that creates a physiological response, you have about 90 seconds.  Once the “oh, no!” thought begins, you have some time to breathe deeply, think of something else, re-frame the situation, or what you find works for you personally.  The trick here is learning to notice what’s going on in your brain so that you can redirect its path from Fight or Flight to something more pleasant.  It takes practice and time, but I think my friend’s eldest can start to get a handle on this.

I’ve also been listening to the audiobook of Your Brain at Work by David Rock.  There is a lot of useful information in there, some of it about re-framing the situation.  The classic example is to “picture the audience in their underwear” – I think this is originally meant to make the audience seem more vulnerable (and thus less threatening); as a kid I just thought it was to make them seem silly, and now I think that, depending on the audience, this might make them seem *more* threatening.  Sometimes reframing is a simple as seeing the other side (most of the audience is worried about their own performance), sometimes it means telling yourself a story (the lady in the front row is frowning only because her favorite aunt is ill).  The trick is to notice the thought and reframe it before the emotions hit, and well before the physiological response kicks in; because once the body goes into Fight or Flight, it’s a long way getting back.

In summary: There’s no “reason” for the fear, and once the physical stress responses begin there’s not much mom can do to help.  Over time and with exposure the experiences can seem less threatening, especially if the sufferer can become aware of when the anxious thoughts and feelings begin and work toward re-directing them.


I’m not a psychologist, but I could play one in an audio book.