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Situations & Environment

Stage Fright's Cousin: Anxiety Before Creative Performance

Key Takeaways
  1. 1. Creative Anxiety Hits Differently Because the Work Is Part of You

    • Music performance anxiety is a distinct construct from general social anxiety in research
    • Kenny's model identifies self-disclosure and identity attachment as key drivers
    • Experience reduces technique anxiety but not the vulnerability of sharing personal work
  2. 2. Your Body Is Not Betraying You — It Is Preparing You

    • Steptoe's physiological research showed pre-performance arousal peaks then drops at start
    • Brooks found reappraising arousal as excitement improved performance across domains
    • Suppression strategies increase arousal while reappraisal redirects it
  3. 3. Pre-Performance Routines Work Because They Give Your Brain Something to Do

    • Jones and Hardy's catastrophe model shows worry, not arousal alone, causes collapse
    • Routines replace open-ended worry with structured action in the critical window
    • Effective routines share a structure: brief, consistent, ending with performance onset
References & Sources (11)

Every claim above is grounded in a primary source below, each one verified against academic citation databases and matched to what the study actually found.

  1. Kenny, D.T. (2011). The Psychology of Music Performance Anxiety. Oxford University Press.

    What we learned: Provided the comprehensive three-component model of music performance anxiety integrating Barlow's triple vulnerability theory, establishing that creative self-disclosure and identity investment are the key variables distinguishing MPA from general social anxiety.

  2. Barlow, D.H. (2000). Unraveling the Mysteries of Anxiety and Its Disorders From the Perspective of Emotion Theory. American Psychologist, 55(11), 1247-1263.

    What we learned: Proposed the triple vulnerability theory that Kenny applied to music performance anxiety, showing how biological, psychological, and specific learned vulnerabilities interact to produce anxiety in performance contexts.

  3. Papageorgi, I., Hallam, S., & Welch, G.F. (2007). A Conceptual Framework for Understanding Musical Performance Anxiety. Research Studies in Music Education, 28(1), 83-107.

    What we learned: Synthesized MPA predictors across populations and confirmed that self-concept and personal investment in creative output are stronger predictors of anxiety severity than experience, technical difficulty, or audience size.

  4. Brooks, A.W. (2014). Get Excited: Reappraising Pre-Performance Anxiety as Excitement. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 143(3), 1144-1158.

    What we learned: Demonstrated across three experiments that reappraising anxiety as excitement improved objectively measured performance without reducing physiological arousal, establishing cognitive appraisal as the critical determinant of performance outcomes.

  5. Steptoe, A., & Fidler, H. (1987). Stage Fright in Orchestral Musicians: A Study of Cognitive and Behavioural Strategies in Performance Anxiety. British Journal of Psychology, 78(2), 241-249.

    What we learned: Documented the cardiovascular activation-recovery arc in professional musicians, showing pre-performance arousal peaks and drops rapidly once playing begins, reframing the stress response as transient activation.

  6. Studer, R., Gomez, P., Hildebrandt, H., Arial, M., & Danuser, B. (2011). Stage Fright: Its Experience as a Problem and Coping With It. International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health, 84(7), 761-771.

    What we learned: Surveyed 190 music students and found that a third experienced stage fright as a real problem, which predicted more frequent use of medication as a coping strategy alongside a strong desire for more support.

  7. Gross, J.J. (2002). Emotion Regulation: Affective, Cognitive, and Social Consequences. Psychophysiology, 39(3), 281-291.

    What we learned: Established the distinction between antecedent-focused strategies like reappraisal and response-focused strategies like suppression, explaining why reappraisal preserves cognitive resources while suppression depletes them.

  8. Hardy, L. (1990). A Catastrophe Model of Performance in Sport. Stress and Performance in Sport, 81-106.

    What we learned: Applied catastrophe theory to arousal-performance, predicting that collapse occurs only when high arousal combines with high cognitive worry, explaining why anxious performers sometimes function well and sometimes fall apart suddenly.

  9. Hardy, L., & Parfitt, G. (1991). A Catastrophe Model of Anxiety and Performance. British Journal of Psychology, 82(2), 163-178.

    What we learned: Experimentally confirmed the hysteresis prediction from the catastrophe model, showing that recovery from performance drops requires returning to arousal levels below the collapse threshold.

  10. Cotterill, S. (2010). Pre-Performance Routines in Sport: Current Understanding and Future Directions. International Review of Sport and Exercise Psychology, 3(2), 132-153.

    What we learned: Identified consistency as the strongest predictor of routine efficacy across performance domains, and described the 'behavioral bridge' concept from pre-performance anxiety to performance execution.

  11. Eisenberger, N.I. (2012). The Neural Bases of Social Pain: Evidence for Shared Representations With Physical Pain. Psychosomatic Medicine, 74(2), 126-135.

    What we learned: Demonstrated that social evaluation threats activate the same neural regions as physical pain, providing a neurobiological explanation for why creative performance anxiety produces physical symptoms that feel disproportionate to social risk.

Creative Anxiety Hits Differently Because the Work Is Part of You

You are standing in the wings, or hovering over the "publish" button, and the feeling is not just nervousness. It is exposure. The work you are about to share is not a neutral deliverable. You wrote it, composed it, choreographed it. And some part of your brain knows that when the audience evaluates the work, they are evaluating you. Research on music performance anxiety confirms that the degree to which a performer's identity is invested in the creative output is a primary predictor of pre-performance anxiety intensity.

Dianna Kenny's cognitive-behavioral model of music performance anxiety distinguishes MPA from generalized social anxiety on precisely this dimension. Social anxiety centers on fear of negative evaluation in social situations broadly. MPA centers on fear of negative evaluation of the creative self through performance. The key variable is not audience size or material difficulty but the personal significance of the work. A session musician playing standardized parts may experience little anxiety. That same musician performing an original composition may experience overwhelming dread.

This explains a pattern that frustrates experienced performers: why more practice does not reliably reduce the anxiety. While technical mastery reduces anxiety about mistakes, it does not reduce the deeper vulnerability of creative self-disclosure. A thirty-year veteran can still feel devastating anxiety before premiering new work. The anxiety is not about competence. It is about the exposure that comes from showing people something that matters to you.

Your Body Is Not Betraying You — It Is Preparing You

If you have performed with shaking hands, a dry mouth, and a pounding heart, you know the feeling of the body seeming to work against you. But physiological research tells a different story. Andrew Steptoe's studies of professional musicians measured cortisol, heart rate, and blood pressure around concerts. The data showed arousal peaked in the final minutes before performance, then dropped sharply within the first few minutes of playing. The body was not spiraling. It was activating for a demanding task, then settling once the task began.

Alison Wood Brooks's research provides the practical bridge. In studies published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology, Brooks demonstrated that telling yourself "I am excited" before performing led to measurably better outcomes than saying "I am calm" or nothing. Participants who reappraised sang more accurately, performed better on math tests, and gave more persuasive speeches. The physiological arousal did not change. But the cognitive frame shifted from threat to opportunity, and that shift altered performance.

The "calm down" strategy fails because it asks the body to do something it cannot do on command. Research on emotional suppression shows that trying to suppress a strong response often increases autonomic arousal. Reappraisal works differently. It does not fight the body's state but reinterprets it. The shaking hands become energy. The racing heart becomes readiness. The anxiety becomes fuel rather than a threat.

Pre-Performance Routines Work Because They Give Your Brain Something to Do

The catastrophe model of anxiety and performance, developed by Graham Jones and Lew Hardy, offers one of the clearest explanations of why some anxious performers fall apart while others channel their nerves. The model proposes that physical arousal and cognitive anxiety interact multiplicatively. Moderate arousal combined with low worry can enhance performance. But the same arousal combined with high worry creates a sudden, dramatic drop. Physical anxiety alone does not cause the catastrophe. It is the combination of a revved-up body and a spiraling mind.

Pre-performance routines earn their power here. A consistent routine gives the mind a structured task during the window where unstructured worry would otherwise escalate. Research on routines in sport psychology shows that athletes with established routines show lower cognitive anxiety and more consistent performance. The content matters less than its consistency and timing. Breathing exercises, warm-ups, mental imagery, or ordinary actions all work, provided the performer does the same sequence before each performance.

Creative performers across cultures have converged on this solution independently. The warm-up rituals of orchestral musicians. The backstage habits of theater actors. These are empirically supported strategies for managing the gap between knowing you will perform and performing. The routine occupies cognitive resources that would otherwise fuel catastrophic thinking, transforming the most anxious period into a familiar, navigable sequence.

This is educational content, not medical advice. It is not a substitute for care from a qualified professional.

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