Your Improv Brain

Your brain knows when you're lying to it, so build an evidence archive

Mar 23, 2026
A look at why simple affirmations often fail for analytical brains and how concrete practice builds true confidence. The episode explains evidence-based confidence and why common improv pep talk phrases feel vague. It covers neurodivergent perspectives, how an evidence archive protects you after a rough show, and offers partner and solo exercises to record real wins.
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INSIGHT

Confidence Built From Verifiable Preparation

  • Evidence-based confidence comes from a verifiable archive of preparation rather than repeating vague affirmations.
  • Jen deHaan cites Eileen Gu: confidence built from hours of training, technical breakdowns, and executed reps that the brain can trust.
ADVICE

Capture Specific Wins Before A Show

  • Keep a specific, honest inventory of what you can actually do instead of telling yourself vague pep-talks.
  • Jen suggests noting concrete wins like running a living room opening 12 times or faster initiations after focused practice.
INSIGHT

Practice As Archive Building

  • Practice becomes the process of building an evidence archive where each rep is proof you can handle a situation.
  • Will Hines' idea: even bad scenes contain discrete evidence like agreed base reality or avoided conflict.
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