When you freeze while speaking at work, you’re not forgetting your English.
It’s your brain hijacking you to survive.
When you speak a second language and your mind goes blank, it’s not a vocabulary problem.
It’s a stress problem.
Under pressure, your brain diverts energy from speech to protection. That’s why your thoughts scatter, and your tongue feels heavy.
Your brain isn’t sabotaging you. It’s trying to keep you safe. It can’t tell the difference between a boardroom and a battlefield.
To retrain it, start with one short, familiar English sentence in a safe situation.
Choose something similar to what you’ll say in that business meeting.
Say it out loud. Notice your heartbeat slow down after a few repetitions.
That calm response is your new data point. It’s the proof that no threat exists.
Repeat it daily until your brain records calm as the new default.
Then raise the difficulty. Speak to strangers. Then to colleagues. Then to people you admire. Each safe repetition rewires your stress circuits. Your brain learns safety through exposure, not through grammar drills or theory.
Teach your nervous system that speaking isn’t dangerous.
Because confidence doesn’t start in your mouth.
It starts in your biology.