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Demand Dignity in Public Speaking Training
by Melissa Lewis
Mandy, a bright, attractive professional woman, had a fear of speaking in
front of groups. Recognizing that her feelings of vulnerability and
self-consciousness were limiting her potential, she showed up for a presentation
skills class filled with trepidation. In the class, the students spent the
morning listening to the instructor explain the rules of public speaking. That
afternoon, they gave their presentations to the group.
After nervously waiting through five other talks, Mandy took her place at the
front of the room-her heart pounding and hands shaking. She plowed through her
10-minute presentation with her mind in an out-of-body blur. When she finished,
Mandy obeyed the instructor's direction to remain front-and-center to receive
her feedback. Comments started with a few "That's a good color on you" and "You
had good eye contact" platitudes, but then the real critique began. She used way
too many "ums." She shifted her weight too much. Her hair was in her eyes. Her
voice was too soft. Most of all, her excessive gestures simply had to be brought
under control! Luckily, the instructor had a gesture-reduction plan. He
playfully took a piece of rope from a cardboard box, used it to bind Mandy's
hands behind her back, and had her give the entire presentation over again.
Did this experience help Mandy overcome her feelings of vulnerability and
self-consciousness? Of course not. She shuffled home feeling humiliated and
victimized. Rather than compassionately working with Mandy as the vulnerable,
dignified, gifted human being she is, the instructor treated her like a horse
whose spirit and wild habits had to be broken with ropes. Literally.
Previous Training As A Source of Fear
In my 15 years of coaching public speaking, I've worked with hundreds of
anxiety-ridden speakers. Surprisingly, they often referred to previous speaking
training as a source of their fear. They've been badgered, nit-picked, and
intimidated-all stemming from a well-intentioned belief that, by fixing the
mechanics, confidence will follow.
For many people, this approach is, at the very least, ineffective-and it can
damage one's sense of dignity. If you see the audience as the enemy, mastering
the art of the upward-hand-sweep-with-the-dramatic-flourish will not make those
faces any less threatening. Even worse, this mechanical approach can be
devastating if you feel insecure to begin with, then walk away with an even
longer list of deficiencies to correct.
Of course, there's value in noticing distracting habits and getting them
under control. If you're already comfortable in the spotlight, great; go ahead
and fine-tune the mechanics. But if you're like Mandy and anxiety is your
primary issue (believe me, you're not alone), a mechanical approach may do more
harm than good.
What You Need from Training
So what do you need, if not the mechanics? Here are four things you'd be
wise to demand from your training session:
1. Work on the cause of your discomfort, not merely the symptoms.
Most people say that one-on-one or in a small group, they're comfortable
with speaking; they only feel awkward when speaking to a large group. If that's
the case, there's good news: You don't have to work on your speaking; you have
to work on getting comfortable being the center of attention. It may not seem
like a significant shift but it is. Speakers tend to work only on what they're
putting out to the audience (content, appearance, visual aids, voice). Often,
the real work is learning to let in what's coming from audience members, namely
their attention.
2. Demand a dignified, healthy process, not just a good outcome.
In Mandy's case, even without ropes, she would probably gesture less the
next time she spoke, but is that really success? Though the end result of her
training was fewer gestures, the teacher cut a swath of emotional destruction on
the way. Desired ends don't justify humiliating means. Always demand to be
treated with respect as you work to develop your speaking skills.
3. Insist on privacy regarding your video.
A common tool in presentation skills training is video, but your video is no
one's business but yours. I have seen accomplished, respected professionals
shrink in horror as their video was shown to and critiqued by the entire class.
All learning value was lost because they were too mortified by the public
display to learn anything. Besides, it's a waste of time. The class just saw you
present the real thing. Why make them watch you twice? In my workshops, students
go to the fun and funky "Learning Lounge" where they have a private video
monitor with earphones, snacks, a comfortable chair, cozy quilts, and a soothing
foot massager. The lighthearted atmosphere takes the sting out of self-awareness
so students can concentrate on learning. Nothing good comes from public
humiliation, so if you're not comfortable with a public video viewing, stand up
for your right to privacy.
4. Feel free to explore your gifts.
"Stay inside the lines." Remember that one? You got a new box of crayons and
wanted to go crazy with them, but a teacher or parent squashed your creativity
by making you color inside pre-existing lines. The same happens in speaking.
Max, a former student of mine, had always been told to follow the rules as a
speaker, so he concentrated on his voice, his stance, his visual aids, etc. When
given permission to forget the rules and speak from his heart, a delightful dry
sense of humor emerged that made him much more likeable and, therefore, more
persuasive. He incorporated this gift into a presentation that was already
effective in the traditional sense, but now had a wonderful new dimension that
would have been missed had he not played "outside the lines."
Mechanics have their place, but you may need to go beyond nit-picking
mechanics. You're a unique human being with gifts, talents, stories, fears,
dreams, and heart. Don't settle for anything less than a dignified,
compassionate approach.
Even horses deserve that.
Melissa Lewis turns traditional thinking about public
speaking upside down to give people more comfort, confidence and charisma in
front of groups. She is a former comic actress, president-elect of the National
Speakers Association Kansas City Chapter and a certified facilitator of SPEAKING
CIRCLES (R). For more information, Email her at
MelissaUDS@aol.com, call (913) 341-1241
or visit
www.upsidedownspeaking.com
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