Understanding Performance Anxiety: Why It Happens and How to Work With It

A cyclist pausing on the start line to take a breath before the race starts — managing performance anxiety through calm preparation.

Understanding Performance Anxiety: Why It Happens and How to Work With It

Do you get nervous when you have to get up on stage to sing or act?
Do you feel jittery before an audition, a game, a meeting, or a presentation?
Does your heart race before a big conversation or interview?

Performance anxiety isn’t limited to the stage or sporting field. It can show up anywhere we feel seen, judged, or evaluated — in boardrooms, classrooms, conferences, or creative spaces.


When Performance Matters

Silhouette of a person standing under a spotlight — representing anticipation and focus before performing.
That quiet moment before stepping into the light.

How much anxiety we feel before a performance often depends on what that performance means to us.

If it connects to your sense of identity — your role as a musician, athlete, teacher, or a professional — or if it feels like a moment that could shape your future, the stakes feel higher. That heightened importance can turn normal pre-event nerves into overwhelming pressure.

We start thinking:

“What if I forget my lines?”
“What if they notice my hands shaking?”
“What if this meeting decides my next opportunity?”

Those thoughts can drive determination and focus — or they can spiral into self-doubt and panic.


When Anxiety Helps (and When It Doesn’t)

A little anxiety isn’t a bad thing. In fact, it’s part of what allows us to perform at our best.
An optimal level of physiological arousal sharpens focus, speeds up reaction times, and enhances memory — all useful under pressure.

As pressure increases, these changes are often accompanied by shifts in attention, particularly as it becomes pulled inward toward evaluation and prediction. This process is explored further in Attention Under Pressure: When Focus Shifts and How to Work With It.

But when that level tips too high, the same system that helps us can start to hinder us. Our concentration narrows. Our breathing shortens. Our mind loops through “what ifs.” Our performance starts to feel out of reach.

That’s when anxiety shifts from being a performance enhancer to a performance blocker.


The Body’s Response: What’s Really Going On

Waves rolling onto the shore, symbolising the body’s physiological response to anxiety
Our body responds to anxiety like the ocean — energy rising, cresting, and eventually calming again.

Anxiety is, at its core, a survival mechanism. When we perceive a threat — even a psychological one, like the risk of embarrassment or failure — our body prepares to protect us.

The amygdala, a part of the brain responsible for detecting danger, sends an urgent message to the hypothalamus. This sets off a chain reaction:

  • The adrenal glands release adrenaline (epinephrine).

  • Heart rate and breathing increase to send oxygen to muscles.

  • Blood sugar and energy are released for quick response.

In the short term, this helps us react quickly. But if the “threat” isn’t life-threatening — just evaluative — our body still behaves as if it’s under attack.

We might experience:

  • Butterflies or nausea as digestion shuts down.

  • Muscle tension, especially in the jaw, neck, and stomach.

  • The need to use the bathroom (the body conserving energy).

  • Racing thoughts as the mind tries to anticipate every possible threat.

These are normal reactions — but they can feel anything but normal in the moment.


Riding the Wave: Managing Performance Anxiety

Performance anxiety doesn’t mean something is wrong with you. It means your brain and body are doing their job a little too enthusiastically.

There are ways to help your system reset and re-engage:

1. Reframe the Sensation

The physical sensations of anxiety — faster heartbeat, quick breathing, heightened focus — are the same sensations that support performance.
Try interpreting them as readiness rather than panic.

“My body is preparing me.”

That small shift changes the emotional meaning of the experience.


2. Ground Through the Breath

Person practising calm breathing to manage performance anxiety before an event. Enhance Life Psychology - Albert Park Psychologist - Nonie - Breathing to manage anxiety.
Simple breathing techniques can help your body reset and signal safety to your mind.

When adrenaline surges, breathing becomes shallow and fast.
Slowing and deepening your breath tells your body you are safe.
Try box breathing — inhale for four counts, hold for four, exhale for four, hold for four — to regulate rhythm and calm the system.

For more strategies, see my article 5 Breathing Techniques for Anxiety and Performance.


3. Focus on the Process, Not the Outcome

Anxiety often comes from over-focusing on the result — the audition outcome, the race time, the impression you’ll make.
Instead, anchor to process goals: what you can control in the moment.

  • For athletes: focus on the next movement or cue.

  • For professionals: focus on communicating clearly, not perfectly.

  • For performers: focus on connection, not critique.


4. Train for Nerves, Not Just Performance

Just as athletes train physically, it’s possible to train psychologically for pressure.
Visualisation, mindfulness, and reflective practice help you learn how your body responds and how to work with it.
The goal isn’t to eliminate anxiety — it’s to build a relationship with it.

This process of learning how attention shifts under pressure, and how to work with it, is explored further in Attention Under Pressure: When Focus Shifts and How to Work With It.


Beyond Sport: Performance Anxiety in Everyday Life

Still reflection of light and calm surface, symbolising mindfulness and composure.
Calm reflection can be just as much a performance as action itself.

Performance anxiety can affect anyone — not just athletes or performers.
Teachers, students, professionals, and leaders all face moments where they feel “on show.” When anxiety shows up regularly, becomes overwhelming, or limits your participation in important areas of life, it’s worth exploring more deeply.

Working with a psychologist can help you:

  • Understand your triggers and thinking patterns.

  • Develop strategies to manage physiological arousal.

  • Build self-compassion and resilience.

  • Learn how to perform with confidence, rather than fear.


Ready to Explore Your Own Performance Anxiety?

Performance anxiety doesn’t have to define you — it can become one of your most useful teachers.

Warm consulting room at Enhance Life Psychology in Albert Park — a calm space to explore performance anxiety.
You don’t have to face performance anxiety alone — exploring it in therapy can help you feel more grounded and confident.

If you’d like to explore how to manage performance pressure in your own life — whether in sport, work, study, or the arts — you can book a session or contact me to find out how we can work together.


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