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Your brain knows when you're lying to it: confidence in improv
Episode 4423rd March 2026 • Your Improv Brain • Jen deHaan
00:00:00 00:14:19

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"Just be confident." "Trust yourself." "Ya got this." You've heard these things, and you might have even said them. And for a lot of brains, especially analytical or pattern-driven ones, they don't work. During the 2026 Olympics, Eileen Gu described herself as an evidence person, not an affirmations person. Her confidence before competition comes from the specific preparation she's done: the hours of training, the technical breakdowns, the repetitions. Her brain trusts that archive because those are things she's actually executed.

This episode applies that distinction to improv. Affirmations are belief-based, and they get shaky when a scene goes sideways. Evidence-based confidence means keeping a specific, honest account of what you've worked on and what has improved. You'll get a partner exercise for practising real-time recognition of competence and a solo method for building your own evidence archive over time.

KEY TAKEAWAYS:

  1. Affirmations can increase anxiety in analytical brains because your internal pattern-matching flags them when they aren't backed by evidence.
  2. Evidence-based confidence means your brain has something concrete and verifiable to draw on under pressure, and a bad show becomes one data point instead of a structural collapse.
  3. Common improv phrases like "there are no mistakes" and "I got your back" are useful philosophies for treating your scene partner's work, but they're vague as internal confidence strategies.
  4. Building an evidence archive changes how you practice: every rep, exercise, and scene adds specific proof that you can handle specific situations.
  5. Even in a rough scene, you can find evidence of what went well, and training yourself to do that is both a skill-building tool and an emotional survival skill.

CHAPTERS:

00:00 Why "just be confident" doesn't work for a lot of brains

00:47 Eileen Gu on evidence vs. affirmations

01:53 What affirmations are and why they get shaky after a rough scene

03:01 Evidence-based confidence and how it works differently

04:54 How common improv confidence advice falls into the affirmation category

06:13 The neurodivergent and nervous system layer: why analytical brains flag affirmations

08:19 How evidence-based confidence changes how you handle a bad show

08:49 Partner exercise: Cheer Squad (real-time recognition of competence in a scene)

11:14 Solo exercise: building your evidence archive after each practice or show

RESOURCES:

  1. Eileen Gu's 2026 Olympics interview on evidence vs. affirmations
  2. Astute Will Hines (referenced for finding evidence of what went well even in bad scenes) Probably from this book, he has written so much stuff though so maybe not, but the book is good --> https://www.willhines.net/book/
  3. Your Improv Brain practice worksheet PDF: ImprovUpdate.com/newsletter
  4. Online article for this episode

RELATED EPISODES:

The Metacognition in Improv Series: Find it near the end of this online page for this episode.



This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis:

OP3 - https://op3.dev/privacy
Podcorn - https://podcorn.com/privacy
Podtrac - https://analytics.podtrac.com/privacy-policy-gdrp

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