Most of us prepare for specific events:
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The job interview
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The big presentation
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The competition
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The difficult conversation
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The first date
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The performance
We rehearse what we’ll say.
We imagine what might go wrong.
We try to feel “calm” before it happens.
But here’s a powerful reframe:
Don’t just prepare for the event. Prepare for the experience of high adrenaline.
At Juniper Counselling, we often see people who aren’t struggling because of one particular situation — they’re struggling because their body’s activation feels overwhelming, unpredictable, or unsafe.
When we learn what high-adrenaline states actually mean — and how to work with them — we build confidence that transfers across every area of life.
The Real Challenge Isn’t the Event
Before something important, you might notice:
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A racing heart
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Butterflies in your stomach
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Tight muscles
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Shallow breathing
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Rapid thoughts
We often label this “anxiety.”
But according to neuroscientist Lisa Feldman Barrett, emotions aren’t automatic reactions that simply happen to us. The brain is constantly making predictions, using bodily sensations and past experience to construct what we call emotion.
In other words:
Your brain feels a surge of activation and predicts, “This is anxiety.”
But that same surge could also be:
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Excitement
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Anticipation
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Determination
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Readiness
The sensations are similar. The meaning we attach to them shapes what happens next.
What If Butterflies Aren’t the Problem?
Many of us try to eliminate nervousness:
“Calm down.”
“Don’t be anxious.”
“Just relax.”
But what if the goal isn’t to get rid of butterflies?
What if the goal is to get your butterflies in formation?
Butterflies in chaos feel overwhelming.
Butterflies in formation feel like focus and power.
High adrenaline is your body preparing for action. It increases oxygen, sharpens attention, and mobilizes energy. It is not a flaw in your system — it’s a feature.
When we interpret activation as danger, we fight our own biology.
When we interpret activation as readiness, we learn to harness it.
Shift the Focus: Prepare for the Process, Not the Scenario
Instead of preparing for every possible outcome in one specific event, prepare for what will reliably happen inside your body.
1. Normalize the Sensations
Remind yourself:
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“A fast heart means my body is giving me energy.”
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“Butterflies mean this matters to me.”
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“Activation is my system turning on.”
Over time, your brain updates its predictions. The meaning shifts from “I’m not okay” to “I’m ready.”
2. Protect Your Body Budget
Dr. Barrett also describes the idea of a “body budget” — your brain is constantly managing resources like sleep, hydration, glucose, and energy.
When you’re underslept, overworked, hungry, or chronically stressed, high-adrenaline moments feel more intense and harder to manage.
Preparing for high-pressure situations includes:
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Adequate sleep
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Consistent meals
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Hydration
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Movement
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Recovery time
A regulated body interprets activation differently than a depleted one.
3. Practice Riding the Wave
Confidence doesn’t come from avoiding adrenaline. It comes from experiencing it and discovering you can handle it.
Practice small doses of activation:
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Speaking up in meetings
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Trying something new
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Having manageable difficult conversations
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Stretching slightly outside your comfort zone
Each time you feel activation and move through it, your brain revises its prediction:
“I can feel this and still perform.”
“I can feel this and still connect.”
“I can feel this and still succeed.”
That’s resilience.
Why This Matters Across the Lifespan
If you only prepare for specific events, your confidence becomes situational.
But if you prepare for high-adrenaline states in general, you build:
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Emotional flexibility
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Nervous system literacy
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Performance confidence
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Self-trust
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Adaptability
You learn:
“My body can get loud, and I know what to do with that energy.”
That skill carries into interviews, parenting, leadership, relationships, public speaking, and major life transitions.
What This Looks Like in Counselling
At Juniper Counselling, we help people:
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Understand how emotions are constructed
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Reframe anxiety as activation
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Build regulation skills that travel across situations
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Strengthen their body budget
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Practice getting their butterflies in formation
Our goal isn’t to eliminate nerves. It’s to increase capacity. Confident people aren’t those who never feel anxious.
They’re people who understand their bodies — and know how to work with them.
Counselling Support in the Tri-Cities
If high-pressure moments feel overwhelming — whether in work, relationships, or daily life — you don’t have to navigate that alone. At Juniper Counselling, we offer counselling in Port Moody, Coquitlam, and Port Coquitlam for adults, teens, and families. We create safe spaces so you can be brave — not by silencing your butterflies, but by helping them fly in formation.
