Speaking English Without Waiting to Feel Ready

[Intro—replace this paragraph.] Set the scene: silence in class or at work because the speaker wants perfect grammar first. Promise low-pressure tactics instead of cliché “just be confident.”

[Subheading 1—edit] Readiness is a moving target

[Placeholder:] Argue that waiting for readiness postpones muscle memory; keep it short.

[Subheading 2—edit] Thirty-second audible answers

[Placeholder:] Describe a micro drill: respond aloud to a simple prompt, timer optional.

[Subheading 3—edit] Trade perfection for clarity

[Placeholder:] Note one revision habit (pause, simplify sentence) instead of endless mental editing.

[Subheading 4—edit] Pick one weekly spoken risk

[Placeholder:] Examples: answer once in seminar, order food with a full sentence, record a voice memo.

[Subheading 5—edit] When anxiety spikes anyway

[Placeholder:] Space for grounding steps or fallback phrases the owner prefers.

[Conclusion—edit]

[Placeholder:] Reassure that uneven speaking weeks are normal; point to confidence-before-fluency essay if relevant.