Day 9 Topic 6
Big idea
Energy goes where your mind focuses. Anxiety feels like scattered sparkles—everywhere at once. You’re not trying to kill the spark; you’re learning to gather it and aim it so it powers sound, story, and timing.
What it is
Turning “nervous buzz” into stage energy you can steer. We’ll use two simple tools:
- Energy Dial + Targeting (find your level, aim it outward)
- Core Cord & Light (a quick image that gathers and cleans your energy)
Why it works
Your conscious mind can hold one focus at a time. When you give it a clear, physical image and a place to send the energy, your body follows—and the noise drops.
When to use
Before entrances, when you feel scattered or flat, mid-phrase wobbles, or anytime the “what if…” thoughts try to take over.
Tool 1 — Energy Dial + Targeting (90 seconds)
Goal: Find your best level and send it somewhere useful.
- Set your dial (1–10): 1 = sleepy, 10 = buzzing. Say your number out loud.
- Pick a target: exit sign, Row 12, a friendly face, the back wall, or your character’s “person.”
- Send the vowel for 2 bars to that target. Switch targets for the next 2 bars (like spotlight cues).
- Check the dial again: did that feel closer to your sweet spot? Adjust with the up/down-shifts below.
Up-shift (if flat)
- 20-second brisk walk in place
- Two quiet “sniff” inhales through the nose
- One short, silent hiss on the out-breath
- Bright eyes → pick a new distant target
Down-shift (if jittery)
- 3–6 breaths in 4 / out 6
- Pick one visual target only (no scanning)
- Say: “Fuel helps focus.” Then sing 2 bars to that target
IF–THEN card
If I start scanning symptoms, then I pick one target and send the next 2 bars there.
Tool 2 — Core Cord & Light (60–120 seconds)
Goal: Gather scattered energy into calm, focused power you can share.
- Picture a flexible cord running down your center (crown → heart → belly → pelvis → floor).
- Inhale: imagine light sliding down the cord and gathering in your center. (Think: warm, steady, not hot.)
- Exhale: release extra noise—tight jaw, shaky hands, mind chatter—out and away.
- Repeat for 4–8 breaths. Each inhale brightens and condenses the light; each exhale clears what you don’t need.
- On the last breath: the light is calm, bright, and aimed. Open your eyes and shower the room with that light as you sing the first line.
Make it yours
- Color the light (gold, cool white, ocean blue—whatever says steady to you).
- Add a word on the exhale: “Clear.” “Quiet.” “Ready.”
- On the final breath, choose who receives that light (your scene partner, Row 12, the back wall).
IF–THEN card
If my energy feels scattered, then I run 3 Core Cord breaths and send the first line as light to Row 12.
Aim + World-Build (boxes → arrows)
- Box (phrase idea): name one world detail—lamp glow, cool air, the distance to your “person.”
- Arrow (attention move): send the light/vowel to a specific target for the next 2 bars.
- Repeat box → arrow down the page (one idea per phrase). Your attention becomes a magnet; your energy follows it.
Common mistakes (and quick fixes)
- Word choice confusion: use “stage energy” or “charge,” not “arousal.”
- Aiming inside the mouth: results live in the room, not on your tongue. Pick a target you can see.
- Forcing calm: you don’t need zero buzz; you need direction. Move it outward.
- Vague images: the brain follows specific pictures. Choose a color, a temperature, a distance.
Drills (quick wins)
- Two-Target Walk (45 sec): Walk to center; sing 2 bars to the exit sign, 2 bars to Row 12. Repeat once.
- Dial Hunt (60 sec): Name your number → up- or down-shift → sing 4 bars → name your number again.
- Cord Flash (30 sec): 2 Core Cord breaths → final breath radiates → sing 1 line immediately.
Assignment (do this today)
- Write your sweet spot (e.g., “I’m best at a 6–7”).
- Choose two targets you’ll use this week (exit sign + Row 12).
- Run Core Cord & Light for 4 breaths before your next rep; on the 5th breath, radiate and sing the first line.
- Log: number before/after, nerves 0–10, and one thing that improved (timing, onset, legato, projection).
PRO TIP — Curiosity powers the light
If judgment creeps in (“This is bad”), don’t fight it. Label it, then turn curious inside your song’s world: What color is the light? How far is my person? What does the air feel like? Curiosity keeps your conscious mind observing, which lets your subconscious do the million-task magic while your stage energy stays gathered and aimed.
Tell me what you think about this and what you want to hear next!