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ཐི༏ཋྀ The Aesense Guide to Public Speaking
⋆.˚⟡ ࣪ ˖ Upgrade Your Voice ⋆.˚˖࿔ ࣪
by 𝓪𝓮𝓼𝓮𝓷𝓼𝓮
Hello and welcome to the Upgrade series! In this series of guides, I will cover the six most important skills to upgrade your life. Here is our schedule for the month!
- The Aesense Guide to Public Speaking: Upgrade Your Voice
- The Aesense Guide to Sex: Upgrade Your Prowess
- The Aesense Guide to Sleep: Upgrade Your Energy
- The Aesense Guide to Fitness: Upgrade Your Strength
- The Aesense Guide to Cooking: Upgrade Your Nourishment
- The Aesense Guide to Self Purpose: Upgrade Your Direction
𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢
᯽ Intro: Public Speaking Is Not “Natural”
First things first, we need to squash one core myth. Public speaking is not natural.Nobody is born delivering persuasive, structured, emotionally resonant speeches to a filled out auditorium. What we call “natural speakers” are people who built strong speaking mechanics early on! Either through years of debate, performance, teaching, or repetition.
Public speaking is not a personality trait. It is a skill set.
Every element of public speaking, from your brain, your breath, your posture, your pacing, and your word structure can be trained. All you need is to harness the power of performance science and cognitive psychology.
In this guide, I will give you research backed tactics and training systems for your public speaking upgrade.
Because it’s not just your voice. It’s your influence. So let’s tune it!
𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢
᯽ The Neuroscience of Stage Fright
You are not alone. In nearly every study, public speaking comes out as the number one fear on earth. This is a universal phobia.The Social Threat Response
When all eyes are on you, your brain may immediately interpret the situation as:᯽ High social evaluation
᯽ Status risk
᯽ Belonging risk
᯽ Reputation exposure
Research on Social Evaluative Threat shows that when humans feel judged by a group, the body produces:
᯽ Adrenaline
᯽ Cortisol
᯽ Increased heart rate
᯽ Reduced motor control
But wait a second. This is the same response used for physical danger! Simply, your biology cannot tell the difference between:
“They might hate my presentation.”
“A predator might eat me.”
Inconvenient. But trainable!
The Working Memory Squeeze
According to research, under stress, your working memory capacity also drops hard. Working memory is what allows you to hold ideas while forming sentences. When stress rises, this capacity shrinks. That is why intelligent people suddenly sound scattered when nervous.That’s also why:
᯽ You forget rehearsed lines
᯽ You lose sentence structure
᯽ You begin to ramble
᯽ You repeat phrases
This is not you being stupid. It’s a part of nature. So elite speakers don’t rely on memory alone.
They rely on structure to get through their points.
𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢
❀ aesense’s advice
Don’t try to be fearless. Better safe than sorry! Train your nervous system to recognize safety.𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢
Secret Sauce: The Two Minute Nervous System Reset
Use this before every speaking event.᯽ inhale through nose for four counts
᯽ exhale slowly for eight counts
᯽ unclench jaw
᯽ relax tongue from roof of mouth
᯽ drop shoulders downward
᯽ press feet firmly into the ground
Repeat ten cycles.
Longer exhales allow yourself to calm your nervous system and help stabilize vocal control.
𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢
᯽ The Speech Structure System
Structure is the hidden engine of confident speech!Listeners rate structured speakers as more intelligent and more persuasive, even when content quality is identical. Structure reduces mental load for both you and your audience.
Today, I will provide a framework to use every time you speak.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Aesense Framework
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Part One: The Hook
Open with one of these:᯽ a surprising statistic
᯽ a short story moment
᯽ a bold claim
᯽ a vivid scenario
Your goal is to capture attention within the first twenty seconds.
Part Two: The Map
Tell the audience what you will cover.Example:
᯽ Today I will share three tools that make your speaking voice sound more confident.
This gives yourself and the audience a guideline.
Part Three: Core Points
Limit to three to five points max.For each point include:
᯽ one headline sentence
᯽ one plain explanation
᯽ one concrete example
This method is best for processing information.
Part Four: Micro Summaries
After each major point, say one recap sentence.Example:
᯽ So the key idea here is that slower pacing increases perceived authority.
This locks the message for your audience.
Part Five: The Loop Close
Return to your opening idea in your final lines. This creates narrative closure and intention.𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢
Secret Sauce: The Anti Blank Blueprint
Never memorize full paragraphs.Memorize only:
᯽ first sentence
᯽ point headlines
᯽ final sentence
Everything between is up to you. This dramatically reduces the risk of freezing.
𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢
᯽ Voice and Delivery Mechanics
Confidence is heard through patterns, not personality.There are measurable signals that make a voice sound credible.
So we should train those directly!
Method One: Pace Calibration
Rushing reduces clarity and authority. Here’s a simple drill to find your tempo.- Record yourself speaking for one minute
- Play it back slightly faster than normal speed
- That playback speed equals your ideal live pace!
Method Two: Power Pausing
Insert a short pause after:᯽ key claims
᯽ section transitions
᯽ important numbers
᯽ your final line
Pauses signal thoughtfulness and control. Silence is emphasis.
Method Three: Emphasis Marking
When writing out speech notes, mark key words using capital letters.Example:
᯽ This ONE method changes results.
Your voice will naturally lift on the marked word.
Method Four: Eye Contact Pattern
Instead of scanning the room randomly:᯽ choose one person
᯽ speak one full sentence
᯽ move to another person
This reduces nerves and also feels more personal to listeners!
𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢
Method Five: Gesture Clarity
Italians are famous for using their hands when speaking. But this really does help emphasize your points! Just make sure you aren’t doing the wrong gestures. Those can signal that you aren’t quite ready for your audience.Use hands to show:
᯽ number of points
᯽ size or scale
᯽ contrast between ideas
᯽ direction or movement
But make sure to avoid:
᯽ face touching
᯽ sleeve pulling
᯽ object fidgeting
Always remember, intentional beats dramatic. Don’t spam, just support.
𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢
᯽ The Seven Day Speaker Upgrade Routine
This is your exposure and skill building ladder, equipped for any event. Follow in order.Day One: Outline Speaking
᯽ speak using bullet points only᯽ no script reading
᯽ five minutes
Your goal is comfortably flowing through your ideas.
Day Two: Full Standing Run
᯽ stand while speaking᯽ deliver full talk
᯽ do not restart on mistakes
Your goal is building continuity and tolerance.
Day Three: Video Capture
᯽ record full run᯽ watch once only
᯽ write three improvement notes
Your goal is finding weak points and fixing them.
Day Four: Skill Training
Choose one focus only and rehearse. Then repeat for the others.᯽ pacing
᯽ filler words
᯽ posture
᯽ vocal emphasis
Your goal is to train each technical skill like a muscle.
Day Five: One Listener Test
᯽ present to one person᯽ ask what felt most clear
᯽ ask what felt rushed
Your goal is having a real audience and real feedback.
Day Six: Distraction Training
Add mild stress:᯽ background noise
᯽ visible timer
᯽ standing with notes only
Your goal is preparing for the worst.
Day Seven: Dress Rehearsal
᯽ wear presentation outfit᯽ perform breath reset
᯽ deliver full talk once
᯽ stop
Your goal is one last prep before the big moment.
𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢
᯽ Extra Tips
A few more final tips and tricks from yours truly.The Filler Word Replacement Drill
- Record yourself presenting.
- Count and note your filler words.
- Redo your presentation replacing each filler with a pause.
The Three Minute Vocal Warmup Drill
Before speaking:- lip vibration sounds
- gentlly hum scales
- exaggerated consonant pronunciation
- slow expressive read aloud
The Opening Line
Memorize your first sentence perfectly. Strong starts reduce anxiety spikes and stabilize delivery for the rest of the talk.The Elegant Recovery Line
If you lose your place, start again with “let me say that more clearly”.This buys thinking time and sounds intentional.
𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢𓎠𓎟𓎠𓎡𓎢
᯽ TL | DR
᯽ this is a universal fear᯽ calm the body first
᯽ structure prevents freezing
᯽ slower pacing increases authority
᯽ pauses are power tools
᯽ memorize points then only first and last lines
᯽ practice aloud not silently
᯽ train one delivery skill at a time
᯽ exposure builds real confidence
Blascovich and Mendes - Research on social evaluative threat
Beilock and Carr - Work on performance pressure and working memory
Anders Ericsson - Research on deliberate practice
Jerath - Studies on slow breathing physiology
George Miller - Work on working memory limits
Allan Paivio - Dual coding theory
Cepeda - Spacing effect research
Apple Streeter and Krauss - Studies on speech rate and credibility
Goldman Eisler - Research on pauses in speech
Rosenberg and Hirschberg - Work on vocal prosody and charisma
Goldin Meadow - Research on gesture and learning
Meichenbaum - Stress inoculation training
Titze - Vocal fold physiology research
Beilock and Carr - Work on performance pressure and working memory
Anders Ericsson - Research on deliberate practice
Jerath - Studies on slow breathing physiology
George Miller - Work on working memory limits
Allan Paivio - Dual coding theory
Cepeda - Spacing effect research
Apple Streeter and Krauss - Studies on speech rate and credibility
Goldman Eisler - Research on pauses in speech
Rosenberg and Hirschberg - Work on vocal prosody and charisma
Goldin Meadow - Research on gesture and learning
Meichenbaum - Stress inoculation training
Titze - Vocal fold physiology research
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