11/06/2026
A common misunderstanding in performance is the assumption that increasing effort automatically improves ex*****on.
Under pressure, performers often attempt to regain certainty through tighter control, increased monitoring, or forcing ex*****on more aggressively.
Yet high-level performance frequently depends on fluid integration and adaptable regulation rather than excessive conscious intervention.
Sometimes the attempt to gain more control becomes part of the disruption itself.
08/06/2026
Under pressure, performers often describe becoming unusually aware of one specific detail during performance.
A single shift, note, movement, or technical issue can suddenly dominate attention, while broader aspects of ex*****on become less accessible.
This does not necessarily mean the performer has become less skilled.
Pressure may simply change where attention is directed.
04/06/2026
Pressure can alter not only ex*****on, but also perceived certainty.
Performers may begin repeating passages excessively, changing stable decisions, or seeking reassurance in material that was previously reliable.
This does not necessarily indicate lack of preparation. Often it reflects altered trust under evaluative conditions.
01/06/2026
One of the paradoxes of performance under pressure is that performers often attempt to stabilise ex*****on by increasing conscious control.
Yet fluent performance frequently depends on processes that function most effectively without excessive conscious intervention.
Under pressure, movements, timing, and technical details may suddenly feel unusually noticeable or exposed. The attempt to gain more control can sometimes increase interference instead.
28/05/2026
Many performers assume that mistakes become destructive because the original error is catastrophic.
But often the larger issue is what happens afterwards.
Under pressure, performers may begin tightening control, rushing, monitoring excessively, or trying too hard to compensate.
In many cases, the response to disruption alters performance more than the mistake itself.
Recovery is one of the least discussed aspects of high-level performance.
27/05/2026
Many performers describe a strange experience under pressure:
material that normally feels stable suddenly begins feeling uncertain.
In the latest newsletter, I explore why performers sometimes stop trusting processes they usually rely on and how pressure may alter not only ex*****on, but a performer’s sense of certainty itself.
https://www.performanceguru.co/so/82Pvg5S57?languageTag=en
26/05/2026
One of the stranger experiences performers describe is the feeling that familiar material suddenly becomes psychologically unfamiliar under pressure.
Not necessarily forgotten — but somehow less accessible.
Under evaluative conditions, performers may experience changes in attentional regulation, self-monitoring, timing perception, and bodily control.
What often feels like “suddenly becoming worse” may actually be difficulty accessing skills that normally feel stable.
This is one reason why performing and practising are not psychologically identical conditions.
22/05/2026
Consistency depends on more than training alone.
18/05/2026
Even small physical discomfort can alter movement patterns.