The data of Korean public speaking anxiety
Saramin 2023: 67% of Korean office workers say "presentation is the scariest work task". Gallup's "top 10 fears" places public speaking above death and war for some respondents. Korean office workers average 2 presentations/month, 24/year. Korean undergraduates average 5/semester. Lifetime: 1,000+ presentations. But anxiety doesn't decrease — first or hundredth, similar intensity is common.
Why public speaking is so scary
Evolutionary answer: humans lived in tribes. Banishment = 100% death (can't survive alone). Negative evaluation in front of the tribe = banishment threat. The brain has learned this for 1M+ years. Public speaking = "evaluation before the tribe" circuit = death-threat circuit. That's why some Gallup respondents rate it scarier than death.
Public speaking anxiety vs. social anxiety disorder
Core distinction: public speaking anxiety (general) is bounded to "this situation" and recovers when over. Social anxiety disorder is broad across daily social situations, 6+ months, with daily-life impairment. Korean 12-month prevalence 6.5% (Ministry of Health 2022). If restaurants, phone calls, and meeting strangers are all frightening too — likely SAD → psychiatry.
7-day pre-talk protocol
D-7 — finalize material: slides / script 100% done. Editing right before the talk ↑ anxiety. Declare "done" a week early. Then only practice.
D-5 — first run before a friend / colleague: full run with one friend. Awkward, but to the end. Get feedback. Nervousness in front of a friend = 80% of the real-talk version.
D-3 — record and self-review: phone-record the rehearsal. Watch yourself objectively. Check "uhs" frequency, pace, gaze, posture. Fix 2~3 most awkward bits.
D-1 — sleep, no practice: don't practice the night before (it scrambles the head). Get 7h sleep. Light exercise. ↓ caffeine. No alcohol.
D-day, 1h before: light meal (low blood sugar ↑ anxiety). Power pose 2 min in restroom. 4-7-8 breath × 5. Self-statement: "I'm excited".
D-day, 10 min before: short chat with 1~2 audience members (strangers → familiar). Walk the room, locate water. Mental-simulate the first sentence × 3.
D-day, during talk: rotate gaze across ~3 audience members (front, left, right), 3 sec each. If you tremble, say "let me take a breath and move to the next slide" — fine.
Cognitive reframing — 4 truths
① The audience watches you less than you think (spotlight effect): social psych — audiences notice speaker mistakes at only 40% of the speaker's estimate. 60% of what you feel as "a huge mistake" goes unnoticed.
② Speaking anxiety isn't visible (illusion of transparency): even when you feel "trembling intensely", only ~50% of the audience notices. Your hands and racing heart are mostly your own knowledge.
③ One mistake ≠ a verdict on you: audiences forget 70% of content in a week, retain <30% of speaker impression. After 6 months — almost gone.
④ Anxiety = excitement (same physiology): pounding heart shares physiology between fear and excitement. Only the interpretation differs. "I'm excited" beats "I'm anxious" by 17% on performance (Brooks 2014).
Mid-talk blank-out responses
- ① Silence OK: 3~5 sec pause reads to audience as "organizing thoughts". Clear silence beats messy "uhs".
- ② Read the slide: glance at the next slide and say the first keyword — flow recovers.
- ③ Honesty OK: "let me re-frame this" or "a little nervous, give me a sec" — audiences like the human moment.
- ④ Skip slide: if a slide is stuck, say "more detail on the next slide" and move on.
Long-term capability building
- Toastmasters: 50 clubs in Korea. Weekly meeting, prepared + impromptu speeches. 6 months in = average 3× improvement.
- Speaking courses: Class101, CMI, etc., online. Don't start 1 week before — work on it routinely.
- Small daily talks: dinner toasts, wedding congratulations — small wins accumulate. Big talks rest on 100 small ones.
Pathological speaking phobia — get care
- 6+ months of total avoidance (quitting jobs to avoid)
- Vomiting / fainting right before
- 2+ weeks depression after
- Cannot speak without alcohol
- Self-harm / suicidal thoughts
Likely SAD. Call 1577-0199 or see psychiatry. Medication (beta-blocker + short anxiolytic) + CBT (especially exposure) is the verified treatment. Free consults via Korean mental health centers.