To endure panic attacks from the Grinch makeup, Jim Carrey was trained by a military expert on enduring torture. The advice wasn't about willpower but about actively disrupting the anxiety spiral by changing sensory patterns (like switching from TV to radio), eating everything in sight, and even chain-smoking.
Surrendering your will to a purpose beyond yourself, similar to 12-step programs, is a powerful tool for overcoming performance anxiety. This act of letting go is especially difficult for talented, self-reliant individuals but is key to trading personal stress for universal strength.
A mental performance coach taught diver Molly Carlson to visualize fear as a piece of paper in front of her eyes. Instead of trying to destroy the paper, she gently shifts it to the side, allowing it to exist without consuming her focus, freeing her to perform.
Instead of only relying on in-the-moment calming techniques, you can proactively increase your overall stress tolerance. Deliberately exposing yourself to heightened alertness in a controlled way, such as through cold showers, trains your nervous system to remain calm during real-life stressful situations.
Molly Carlson, who has Generalized Anxiety Disorder, finds that the three seconds she's in the air during a high dive are the most silent her brain ever is. The extreme physical risk and focus required create a temporary state of pure presence, making the dangerous act a powerful mental escape.
You cannot simply think your way out of a deep-seated fear, as it is an automatic prediction. To change it, you must systematically create experiences that generate "prediction error"—where the feared outcome doesn't happen. This gradual exposure proves to your brain that its predictions are wrong, rewiring the response over time.
Instead of treating fear as a psychological flaw, view it as a neutral, physical vibration in the body. This atomic perspective, inspired by physics, allows you to step out of self-judgment and use the energy creatively. You stop managing the 'idea' of anxiety and start experiencing the raw sensation.
Based on the principles of EMDR, intentionally moving your eyes laterally from side-to-side for about 30 seconds can suppress activity in the amygdala. Neuroscientist Andrew Huberman confirms this is a scientifically validated technique for creating a state of reduced alertness before a stressful event like public speaking.
To perform a dangerous, world-first dive, Carlson consciously uses overwhelming positivity to override her brain's fear signals. She calls this "gaslighting" herself into believing she's capable, a technique for extreme mental preparation under pressure.
Emanuel believes his extreme wellness routines are direct training for business. By teaching his mind to handle the physical discomfort of ice baths or fasting, he builds the mental capacity to endure professional aggravation. This practice of being "comfortable in the uncomfortable" translates directly to entrepreneurial resilience.
To shift from anxiety to a peak performance state, use physical mechanisms. A specific technique involves scaled, intense breathing to oxygenate the brain and lower cortisol, followed by Qigong "cupping" to open the body's meridians. This provides a physiological lever for emotional regulation.