While we may chastise ourselves for stumbling over our words or saying the wrong thing, we'd likely never notice such a thing in our peers.
It's worrying about saying the wrong thing or asking a question others think is stupid or has an obvious answer.
"Even if you stutter, even if you don't say it perfectly how you intended, it's taking you out of your head and into action," Durham said.
"If you're someone who's in your head, you are not the target audience for that constructive criticism," she added.
"So you are inherently not going to say the wrong thing."
Persons:
—, Emily Durham, Durham, it's, Zers, It's, They've, you'll
Organizations:
Service, Business, Deloitte, Harvard Business School