IN REAL LIFE
In Real Life

Choking Under Pressure

Why high stakes can break a skill you've nailed a hundred times

Choking under pressure is when high stakes make a well-practiced skill worse instead of better. The mechanism is counterintuitive: pressure causes your brain to start consciously monitoring a skill that normally runs automatically. This shifts control from the efficient motor circuits in the basal ganglia and cerebellum back to the slower, more deliberate prefrontal cortex.

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A musician nails a piece at home a hundred times, then fumbles on stage. A tennis player who serves effortlessly in practice double-faults at match point. A student who knows the material cold goes blank in the exam room. The cruel twist is that novices don't choke, only skilled performers do. Overthinking can only disrupt what's already automatic. The fix is counterintuitive too: focus on something external (the back of the rim, a target word in your speech) rather than monitoring your own technique.

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Choking Under Pressure