How to Reduce Your Social Nervousness: 3 Simple Steps

“Do not anticipate trouble or worry about what may never happen. Keep in the sunlight.”
Benjamin Franklin

One very common question I’ve gotten over the years goes something like this:

“I always get nervous before a date/meeting/social gathering and that holds me back from being my true and best self and from doing and getting what I want. What can I do to overcome this?”

This is an issue that used to hold me back in the past and I’ve more experience with it than I would have ever wanted.

Back when I was still single I often got quite nervous before a date.

And before that, when I didn’t have a date at all in a long time, I got nervous before most social situations.

It was no fun.

Things weren’t hopeless though. And today I would like to share three small habits and steps that, simply put, totally changed my life.

Step 1: Slow down.

A few minutes before you step into the meeting, job interview or date that makes you nervous slow down.

Walk slower to the meeting place. Move slower.

Then stop.

Step 2: Breathe.

Stand still or sit down for a minute. And then just breathe. Take a little deeper breaths than usual.

Make sure you breathe through your nostrils and with your belly.

Focus on just your slow in-breaths and out-breaths for 1-2 minutes.

This will calm your mind and body down and make it easier to think clearly and normally again.

Plus, that singular focus on your breathing will draw you back into this moment instead of leaving you lost in the thoughts of past failures or destructive worries about your near future.

Step 3: Assume rapport.

Assuming rapport means that just before you met someone you pretend and think to yourself that you are meeting one of your best friends.

Doing this will allow you to naturally slip into a much more relaxed, comfortable, confident and enjoyable emotional state and frame of mind.

In this frame of mind the conversation and smiles tends to flow naturally, without much thinking.

Just like with your best friends.

It’s, in my experience, a very simple habit to adopt but at the same time it’s also an incredibly powerful habit for tapping into your best social self.

By using these three steps over and over they will become habits that are easy to use. And over time as you get good results in social situations the old normal of feeling nervous will be replaced by a new normal.

A normal where you’re – at least most of the time – relaxed and confident in social situations because all your recent experiences put together have changed how you view yourself and what you expect on dates, in meetings and other such situations.

 

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About the Author

Henrik Edberg is the creator of the Positivity Blog and has written weekly articles here since 2006. He has a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Gothenburg and has been featured on Lifehacker, HuffPost and Paulo Coelho’s blog. Click here to learn more…

Comments on this entry are closed.

  • Great tips. I’ve always been shy and have found no. 3 to be really helpful. I especially like your comment, “all your recent experiences put together have changed how you view yourself and what you expect.”

    Another thing that really helped me was to realize (quite by accident, actually) that many of those I had seen as social and outgoing actually weren’t really listening when other people talk. Suddenly I felt much more confident, knowing that I’m better to talk to than they are because I do listen!

    • Thanks, Christy! And that is a helpful tip and realization, I appreciate that you added it here.

  • Thanks! I always like to hear on this topic because I get so nervous on an interview. Now I know I should treat it as a normal, comfortable conversation. This is awesome!

    • Glad you liked it, Dee, hope it will be as helpful for you as it has been for me.

  • Craig

    Henrik,
    Thank you so much for this. I plan on taking those three steps the next time I am in a situation where I am facing nervousness like that.

  • Sandra Miles

    I wanted to take a moment to thank you for sharing your Positivity blogs…”Thank You”. Your blog has helped me from time to time. Over the past 9 months I’ve been dealing with a very close family member who has been diagnosed with Dementia of Alzheimers, Sundowners type.

    While I am not the primary caregiver, I help and frankly sometimes I feel like I am primary. My doctor recommended I read a book; The 36 Hour Day. I am still trying to finish it. The title is true to life that’s for sure.

    I read your blog and share it with my mother. I also pray a lot.

    Thank you! :)

    Sincerely,
    Sandra

    • Thank you very much, Sandra! I hope the blog will continue to help you and your mother and that your situation will improve.

  • Sandy

    I saw this post just in time. I will be heading to a book signing on my own tonight since my friend changed her mind for the gym instead (at the last minute). I’ll try and not keep to myself at the event ^_^. Thank-you for the post and Happy Blogoversary!

  • Congratulations on completing 7 years of inspiring people minds and driving them to better life. I’m truly impressed with your good karma. Your art of simplicity is evident even in the theme you use. I love thesis too(will switch soon)

    Wishing you greater success ahead. God bless you for all your good karma.

  • Wal

    Congratulations! Seven years is a long and respected time!

  • Marisa Van Dyck

    Dear Henrik,

    Happy 7th Birthday for your wonderful blog!
    Thank you for all your beautiful insights, advise and for a wonderful way to see life.

    A Big hug from Guadalajara, Mexico!
    Marisa

  • Interesting point about assuming rapport, it is something I have been doing naturally in some situations, but in others I never made the connection. Thanks for the tip, and I hope I make it to 7 years some day!

    • Glad to hear that it has helped you too, Ragnar! I wish you the best with your blog and hope you will keep it going for a long time.

  • Julie Fitzgerald

    I have been reading your blog for about 5yrs now and still find it inspiring. I need to read and reread ideas for them to ‘sink in’ – I suppose I am more receptive to some ideas when they are more pertinent to my life circumstances. Thank you for your common sense ideas and clear writing. You help me be a better person, more self reflective.

    • Wow, cool to hear that you have been reading it for so long, Julie! And I am glad to have been of help and that you still find the blog inspiring.

  • sabie

    positive thinking is a way of life i belive.
    thank you so much

  • Ratika

    Congrats for completing 7 successful yrs , and thanks for the positivity blog. It has been extremely helpful in the past like today’s 3rd step. It’s easy and will be of great help to someone like me who gets messed up every time in a meeting even when I know my ideas are brilliant. Delivering them makes me nervous. Well thanks again.
    Ratika.

    • Thank you, Ratika! And I’m glad you liked that tip too, it is one of the very best I have learned over these 7 years.

  • Keerthi Ganesh

    I always find henrik’s blog such motivating to feel and enjoy life , especially after a weekend and starting for office on Monday.

  • sunny

    Great work of inspiring people. very helpful at times when the things are going tough and you feel a bit low.

  • Akinnuoye Tunde

    Very niece positivity blog. It will imparts generations positively