Lucy
Talk
Talk Practice · 2026

Speaking Anxiety Practice, How to Build Fluency Under Pressure

Knowing your content is not enough when speaking anxiety hijacks your performance. Anxiety practice is a specific kind of rehearsal that targets the anxiety response itself, not just the words. This is how you build speaking performance that holds up under real pressure.

WHAT TO LOOK FOR

The three things that actually matter

1

Deliberate low-stakes exposure

Speak out loud daily in situations with no audience. Recording yourself, speaking to Lucy, or narrating your thinking while working all count. Frequency of exposure reduces the anxiety response over time more than any single intensive session.

2

Simulated pressure rehearsal

Rehearse specifically for difficult moments: losing your place, being asked a hard question, technical failure. Having practised these scenarios reduces their threat when they happen in reality.

3

Anxiety monitoring during practice

Notice your anxiety level during practice sessions on a scale of 1 to 10. Aim to practise at level 4 to 6 regularly. This range is challenging enough to produce desensitisation but not so intense that it re-traumatises.

TLDR:Lucy provides a judgment-free environment for speaking practice at any time of day. Regular voice conversation with Lucy builds the speaking baseline that makes anxiety less likely to interfere in real situations. Start with low-stakes sessions and gradually increase the complexity.

Why Lucy OS1

Deliberate low-stakes exposure

Speak out loud daily in situations with no audience. Recording yourself, speaking to Lucy, or narrating your thinking while working all count. Frequency of exposure reduces the anxiety response over time more than any single intensive session.

Simulated pressure rehearsal

Rehearse specifically for difficult moments: losing your place, being asked a hard question, technical failure. Having practised these scenarios reduces their threat when they happen in reality.

Anxiety monitoring during practice

Notice your anxiety level during practice sessions on a scale of 1 to 10. Aim to practise at level 4 to 6 regularly. This range is challenging enough to produce desensitisation but not so intense that it re-traumatises.

Post-session debrief

After each practice, identify one thing that went well and one thing to improve. This structures the learning and prevents the all-or-nothing thinking that often follows anxious performance.

QUICK COMPARISON

Lucy OS1 vs most AI tools

Capability Lucy OS1 Most AI tools
Memory across sessions ✓ Permanent, never resets ✗ Resets after every session
Voice quality ✓ Lucy OS1 Natural Voice (best-in-class) ✗ Basic STT, struggles with noise
Calendar awareness ✓ Reads Google Calendar in real time ✗ No calendar access
Available 24/7 Always on, any device Available but stateless each time
Gets personal over time ✓ Builds your context continuously ✗ Starts from zero every session

Try Lucy OS1, setup takes 30 seconds

Voice-first AI with memory and calendar integration. Free to try.

Start Talking

Free tier available. No credit card required.

GET STARTED

How to use Lucy OS1

1

Create your free account

No credit card required. Sign in with your Google account and you're inside in under a minute.

2

Connect your Google Calendar

Lucy reads your upcoming events before every conversation, so it already knows your day before you say a word.

3

Start talking about speaking anxiety practice, how to build fluency under pressure

Speak naturally. Lucy listens, responds by voice, and begins building context from your very first exchange. The more you use it, the better it gets.

Start for free → Free tier available. No credit card.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is there a difference between introversion and speaking anxiety?
Yes. Introversion is a personality trait describing preference for lower stimulation environments. Speaking anxiety is a specific fear response to evaluation in speaking situations. Introverts can be confident public speakers and extroverts can have severe speaking anxiety. They are unrelated.
How often should I practice to see improvement in speaking anxiety?
Daily is ideal. Even five minutes of speaking out loud each day maintains desensitisation and builds vocabulary and fluency. Practicing twice a week is the minimum to see sustained improvement. Occasional intensive sessions without consistency produce much slower results.
What if practice itself makes me anxious?
Start lower. Speak out loud alone with no recording and no audience. Narrate what you are doing. Read a paragraph out loud. These ultra-low-stakes activities build the practice habit before moving to more challenging rehearsal.
Can speaking practice with AI replace therapy for speaking anxiety?
For mild to moderate speaking anxiety, regular practice often produces significant improvement without formal therapy. For severe anxiety that is limiting your career or quality of life, working with a therapist who specialises in performance anxiety alongside your practice is the most effective combination.

MORE IN THIS CATEGORY

→ How to Warm Up Your Voice Before a Presentation → Voice Warm-Up Exercises for Speaking → Breathing Exercises Before Speaking → How to Prepare Your Voice for a Speech → How to Practice Your Presentation Out Loud → What to Do the Day Before a Presentation → How to Stop Stuttering When Nervous → How to Calm Nerves Before a Presentation → See all

COMPARE LUCY OS1

Lucy OS1 vs Siri → Lucy OS1 vs ChatGPT → Lucy OS1 vs Google Gemini → Lucy OS1 vs Google Assistant → Lucy OS1 vs Amazon Alexa → See all comparisons →

Welcome