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You're in a scene. It's going fine. Then your scene partner says a line and you
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open your mouth to respond and there's nothing. Absolutely nothing. Your improv
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brain is a blank, a white empty room. Maybe some of the advice you've always
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heard is just say something, whatever comes to your mind next. And maybe that
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advice is the reason you're stuck in the first place. You need some specifics or
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a process to find that next thing. That feeling of your mind shutting down or
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going blank on stage is horrible. And if you felt it, you're not alone. It's
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usually a top five fear for any performer. Today you'll hear one process for
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actively working through this feeling. I'm going to give you a simple three-step
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system to effectively reboot your brain when it crashes out while performing.
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This isn't about being clever or a better thinker or thinking fast on your
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feet because we don't really want to think in improv, do we? This is a
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technique that works with your biology, not against it, to get you painlessly
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back into the scene. Hi and welcome to your improv brain. I'm Jen deHaan and I've
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taught and coached improv with several schools and I release improv resources
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at improvupdate.com. I also run StereoForest which specializes in
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improvised comedy, audio drama series, and podcast production. I especially love
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developing characters and shows and I love improv and sharing my love of it
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here on this show. So back to today's topic and a really important question.
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What happens if you try this three-step system? I'm about to drop into this
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episode and you're still stuck. What's the safety net? What's that final thing you
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can do? And I'll answer that question by the end of this episode. In a recent
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episode I talked about one way to always have stuff to draw from, ready to add
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into a scene or to create a new relatable character on the spot. And I'll link
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that episode in the description and the show notes. And even while having a bunch
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of inspiration ready to go, like I explained in that episode, can reduce
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the chances of your mind going blank while you're performing, it can still
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happen. So let's talk about why your brain goes blank. It's not a personal
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failing. It's not a sign that you're bad at improv or don't have those ideas or
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references to draw from. It's often an issue of what's called cognitive load.
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You can think of your brain kind of like a computer and right now it has too many
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programs running all at once. So think about it. You're trying to listen to
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your scene partner. You're trying to remember the rules of improv. You're
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aware of the audience watching you. Maybe those stage lights are hot or
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there's a weird smell in the room. Maybe you had a terrible day at work even
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before you got to the theater or someone is fake eating really loud on stage
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and you cannot hear anything else right now. Your brain is trying to process
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everything all at once today right now. And just like a laptop with too many of
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those resource intensive buggy creative applications open, it crashes. You
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experience a system freeze and this is completely normal. It's a biological
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response to being overwhelmed above threshold. So this is something that
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happened to me quite regularly when I was teaching dance fitness. This might
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seem unrelated to improv but it's pretty much the same idea when I was
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performing on stage and it happened often because there are few more
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variables that you hit more often in dance fitness performance. There's music,
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there's lights, there's heat, there's any aches and pains, there's upsets before
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the class started perhaps. And why it was so common is the people in front of me.
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I had to have focus on what was happening in the room with the participants
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which is kind of like an audience because I was responsible for their safety
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on top of everything else I had going on. And that would cause my brain to go
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blank about the choreo and the cues sometime if I was already close to that
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threshold. If I was thinking about if someone was comfortable and safe over
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there and uh-oh what am I doing with my feet and my arms and the words what is
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the next piece of choreo and this was so common I had to have equivalent systems
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kind of like the one I'm about to describe in this episode I had to have
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them on hand. But I kind of knew what days I was more likely for this to happen
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and this was always due to hitting some threshold in my brain and the moves and
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the things I knew backwards and forwards just wouldn't drop in to place and my
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body and brain had to just do something else. This is biology, it's not a
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character flaw, it's not your failure. You know improv, you just didn't receive
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anything in that particular moment and that's okay. Now before we get into the
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three steps to reboot your brain there's one similar case that we should address
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first because sometimes your mind is blank on how to respond because you
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genuinely didn't understand or hear what your scene partner just said or maybe
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you feel like you're missing some important subtext that they dropped. In
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this situation the fix is simple just ask your scene partner in character. If
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they say something confusing you can respond as your character and say sorry
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what was that? The spaghetti factory is so loud or wait what did you mean by that
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Brenda? This is always allowed it not only helps you but it also helps clarify
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the scene for the audience who might be just as confused as you are about the
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subtext or an inferred meaning that might have been there or maybe it wasn't
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they might not have seen the facial expression from where they're sitting in
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the audience or maybe it was too loud in the room or if it's me I'm just really
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bad at subtext sometimes or most of the time because I'm autistic and as a side
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note in this case in improv you can also add what you inferred into the scene and
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guess what they got a yes and that even if it's not exactly what they meant
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improv it's one of the reasons why more comfortable on stage than off it but
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that's a different episode okay so let's say that's not the case you heard them
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you understood them and still nothing came to mind your mind is blank
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everything just dropped out so before you do anything else step zero bonus step
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and the most important thing to do is to just pause and take a breath
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pausing is okay in fact pausing is good we do it all the time in real life people
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pause to think they pause when they're emotional it's a human thing to do so
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let's first get comfortable with the idea that a pause adds to your character it
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adds richness it's not a rookie move or something unacceptable it's actually
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very good improv it's good acting and good character work since it's human and
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it's very relatable the key is to just stay in character while you do it just
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stand there as your character and breathe if something is available to you you
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could even make like a small emotional sound like a sigh or a little laugh or a
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physical reaction like rubbing your temples but if you're doing nothing
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that's okay too just stay present with your character okay so you've taken that
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pause maybe that alone will work or maybe not so now let's reboot and here are
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the three steps step one focus outwards when your mind is blank it's almost
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always because you're focused inward on like your own panic you're thinking oh
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no I have nothing they're all looking at me and I'm failing the first step is to
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break that inward spiral and force your attention outwards look at something
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anything outside of your own head look at your scene partner's face really look
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at it look at that shirt that they're wearing look at an imaginary object in
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the room a couch a window a painting on the wall pick one thing and put all of
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your focus on that then you can simply comment on it like looking at your
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partner you could say you look exhausted or looking at that imaginary couch you
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could say this is an old couch and that's it that's step one forcing your
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brain to observe and state a very simple physical reality you can yank
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yourself perhaps out of that internal panic spiral and you might find this is
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enough to just bring yourself and bring your brain back online but if you're
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still feeling a little bit blank or a little bit shaky you can move to step
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two so step two is the emotional reaction you focused on that object this old
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couch the next step is to ask yourself one simple question how does my
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character feel about that couch or how does my character feel about my scene
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partner's expression in this moment then you just respond with whatever you're
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feeling so you might have said oh this old couch your emotional reaction could
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be I love so how comfortable it is or it could be I can't believe your mother
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left this thing to us in her will if you commented on your partner that they
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look exhausted your emotional reaction could be I'm exhausted - what this does
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is instantly generate a relationship and a point of view for your character
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you're not just two talking heads on a stage you're two people who have a
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shared feeling about whatever thing it is in your environment or in your
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immediate presence this immediately deepens the scene and it connects you
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back into what's happening right now now if you've done that and you still feel a
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little bit stuck in the scene there is a step three so let's move on to that one
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now step three make a related statement or ask a question use that emotional
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reaction you just did to throw the ball to your scene partner this gives you
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another moment to breathe and gets them involved in building the next piece of
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the scene with you so let's go back to our examples for a second if you said I
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love how comfortable this old couch is you could follow up with a statement like
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we should never get rid of it or you might ask think we could find another
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one like it for the cabin or something if you said I'm exhausted too maybe you
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could then say we should sell the business or ask perhaps we need to take
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a break and maybe get the dogs out to the beach now I know many of us are taught
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early on in our improv training don't ask questions just don't ask but that
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rules often misunderstood it's meant to stop us from asking open-ended questions
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that put all of the work onto our scene partner like where are we or what are we
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doing or who are you these are the kinds of questions that we're talking about
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that are open-ended but the ones here that I'm suggesting are different these
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are questions that add something new to the scene they add information or they
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denote a desire or a little bit of a brief new direction they help you and
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they help the scene because they're behaving a little bit more like
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statements than questions so these kind of statement like questions are
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absolutely fine and also you're just trying to get the scene back so even if
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they aren't statement like just do what's going to work for you in this
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moment the other benefit of this whole three-step process is it can give the
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scene a bit of a rest if you're in a fast-paced game or in a dense narrative
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taking a moment to do this can pause the action while adding a new dimension of
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character or emotion into the scene and when you return to that game or return
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to the narrative it will be richer because of this little scenic detour this
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again is just plain old good improv and this system is really similar to what
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I've used in dance fitness classes the ones I mentioned earlier near the
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beginning of this episode I taught myself to automatically kick into some
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move for everyone to follow it was the wrong move but I kicked into it and I
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would admit to the room that we were doing the wrong choreo because sometimes
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the choreography came even with a blank mind but if it didn't this system took
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over and I had a set of moves that almost always worked no matter what the
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music was and I just start doing one of them and focus on admitting that we are
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doing the wrong move while laughing and during that moment I'd refocus I'd relax
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people would laugh from my admission of doing the wrong thing and those things
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would always cause my brain to reconnect to the class and the music and
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everything would somehow return and guess what the people in the room loved
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those moments the best including me so that's it that's the three-step system
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focus outward find your emotional reaction and then make a statement or
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ask a good question and in a second I'll give you one more tip if your mind is
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still blank after this process but first if this video was helpful I love for
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you to click like on it so I know to keep making these things share it with
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improvisers you know that also might find it useful and I have a lot more
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videos and resources at improvupdate.com and a discord community where we chat
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about doing improv and teaching improv and coaching it too so join us there and
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leave a comment on YouTube or in the discord about what's the one external
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thing that you always seem to notice or point out while you're in a scene is it
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their hair is it the dog so now let's answer the question that I posed at the
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start of this episode what happens if you go through all three of these steps
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and your mind is still blank what's the final safety net and the answer is
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pretty simple it's your scene partner we have all been there every single
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improviser from people doing their first class to people who are 20 years in we've
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all had days where life is just overwhelming and if someone hasn't ever
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had this happen to them they're probably just lying or they're not human like us
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but regardless your scene partners are there to have your back no matter what
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they have absolutely been in this exact position before if you have a scene
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partner who is experienced or someone you know really well and you've done a
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ton of scenes with them sometimes all it takes is a look a quick glance that says
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help I'm lost and they will just like you know what that look is because they've
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experienced it in the past they'll take the lead they'll make a strong offer
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they'll add some more detail they'll ask your character a question they know you
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can answer to get you back into the scene they will carry that scene out until
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you can get back on your feet that trust is the final and most important safety
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net that we have in improv you're not up there alone we all have each other's
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backs so thanks for tuning in and I'll be here next Monday for the next episode
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bye for now you have been listening to your improv brain a StereoForest
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production this show is created and is written edited and produced by Jen
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deHaan of StereoForest.com you can find show information show notes
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transcripts and contact information at the show's page at
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StereoForest.com/improvbrain thanks for listening
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(Music)
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you
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