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Four Lessons from the Open Water
I
live in Seattle, which is surrounded by water. Several years ago,
as a relatively new swimmer, I discovered a new addiction: swimming
in Seattle’s lakes and Sound. As an adult new swimmer, I
face many challenges, especially when participating in a race. I
often feel inept, fear looking foolish, and sometimes my performance
anxiety is almost unbearable.
Read that last sentence again. If you have ever given a presentation,
do my symptoms sound familiar?
For the last ten years, I have helped professionals from all walks
of life present more effectively. But my new-found challenges with
the open water have allowed me to empathize more fully with my
own clients’ experiences as they strive to be the best presenters
they can be.
I’d like to offer you four lessons I’ve learned from
the open water. They are simple but profound. I guarantee
these lessons will help you improve your public speaking.
Open Water Lesson #1:
I must be in touch with my body. You must be in touch with yours.
Nothing that goes on in the water is “dreamy” for
me, as a new swimmer. When I swim in that cold Puget Sound, my
mind never wanders. I am totally focused on what I am doing. I
feel things from the inside out, from the inside of my toes to
my chilly face. I am totally present.
Presenters run into trouble when they lose touch with their physical
selves. Far too many speakers believe that everything they need
to present effectively is in their heads—or in the technology
they are using.
The truth is, you present from your body. I’m not
referring to body movement. I’m talking about the magic that
occurs when you truly inhabit your body as a speaker.
Suddenly, you breathe easier. Your mental capacity is stunningly
clear. When you feel fully present in your body, there is no space
for fear.
TIP: To inhabit your body, get into it before you speak.
Slip into a nearby restroom. Go into a stall. Stand with your knees
slightly bent. Feel the weight in your feet. Focus on this dynamic
body. It will not let you down or let you forget anything if you
fully reside within it.
But none of this will work without enough oxygen. Remember
to breathe into your body…all the way to the tips of your
toes.
Open Water Lesson #2:
The environment bombards us with input. We ignore it at our own
risk.
Much more than swimming in a pool, open-water swimming is fraught
with potential dangers and excitements. Everything around me changes
all the time: the size of the swells, the sudden appearance of
fish, logs, or even seals, the distant sound of a motorboat. Everything
around me is input. I ignore it at my own risk.
As a speaker, input surrounds you. It can take many forms: enthusiastic
or disinterested audience members, environmental distractions,
structured feedback from peers, even your own internal reactions
to what someone has said.
It’s often good to respond to input. If you never do,
you will alienate your audiences. However, if you try to address
every piece of input, you may well experience the speaker’s
nightmare. You may lose your focus, forget what you’re going
to say, and get lost.
Input will always bombard us as we present. It offers us many
invitations, some very exciting. When you make a conscious choice
whether or not to respond, you remain in control as a speaker.
TIP: Deal effectively with input by:
- Being continually open to it.
- Then, choosing how to respond, if at all.
Open Water Lesson #3:
The art of open water swimming is all about connection. The art
of presenting is too.
When I swim, I feel one with nature, water, plant life, the motion
in my body, my swim buddies…everything around me. Nothing
else in my adult life has allowed me to experience this profound
a state of connectedness. I become the absolutely “best me.”
The art of presenting is all about connecting: with your material,
your audience, and yourself. When you connect with your audience
members through eye contact and openness, you establish a relationship.
That relationship helps you enormously. It helps you reduce
your anxiety, disarm hostility, and sell your ideas. It humanizes
the presentation by establishing a non-verbal dialogue.
TIP: Right before presenting, tell yourself: Presenting is a relationship activity,
not a performance activity. Connection trumps all.
Open Water Lesson #4:
Discovery is key. By discovering something new each time
you present, you become enamored.
Every time I go into the water, I see and experience new things.
Swimming off of Canada’s Vancouver Island, I remember how
shocked I was to see the many bright red starfish below me in the
ultra-clear water. I love swimming on my back, looking up into
the amazing sky, or waving to the surprised guy in his backyard
as he lights his barbeque or takes a walk with his child. Discovery
is a delightful endorphin!
Professional presenters depend on new discoveries. They may deliver
the same speech dozens of times. They keep it fresh by developing
new anecdotes to illustrate a theme, by re-wording sections, by
engaging in more dialogue with the audience. All are risks; all
are discoveries. The most boring speakers are those who never take
a chance, who never try something new.
TIP: Know the core of your message so well that you can remain open
to discovering and trying new things. Achim Nowak, a renowned speech
professional, writes in Power Speaking (2004:) “The moment
we stop trying so hard to control, we actually gain a sense of control
we did not have before.”
Finally-It's All About Flow.
As a newer swimmer, I will always experience tension between the
level of my skills and the challenges put before me. I’m
never 100% confident. Yet each time I put my whole self into the
act of swimming, I experience a state of grace. I become even more
addicted!
Achim Nowak writes, “Public speaking, at its best, has the
power to transport both speaker and audience into a heightened
state of engagement akin to what we experience in high-flow recreational
activities.”
If you’ve ever lost yourself doing something you love, you
know that your self-consciousness disappears. Even time seems to
change. We most often reach this optimal state of “flow” when
our focused efforts, combined with our own level of skills, stretch
us to the limit. We are lost in the activity. We love it!
And YES, you can reach a state of “flow” through public
speaking. When you invest yourself totally into the act of presenting,
it all becomes easy. You’ll slip through the water like a
fish.
Guila Muir is an accomplished open-water swimmer. Since learning
to swim five years ago, she has participated in many open-water
swimming events, including the swim from Alcatraz Island to San
Francisco in 2006.
Guila Muir and Associates is the premier Train the Trainer company
on the West Coast of the United States. Contact us with questions
and comments at guila@guilamuir.com.
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your HOOK to: guila@guilamuir.com.
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About Guila Muir & Associates
Guila Muir and Associates is the premiere Train-the-Trainer firm
on the West Coast. Using participatory adult education since 1981,
Guila Muir & Associates has developed the skills of hundreds
of trainers and facilitators in business and government. Enhance
your organization's ability to transmit information the way adults
learn best-actively! Visit our web site at guilamuir.com,
write us at connect@guilamuir.com or
call us at (206) 725-1994.
Copyright 2005 Guila Muir and Associates


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