How to get over the fear of someone reading my personal, emotional essays?

DeboraMiles

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Feb 27, 2026
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I'm in a creative nonfiction workshop class, and for our final portfolio, we have to write a deeply personal piece. I chose to write about something that actually happened to me—a really difficult family situation that I've never really talked about openly.

The writing part was actually... cathartic. It felt good to get it on the page. But now comes the terrifying part: next week, we have to share our drafts for peer review. A small group of my classmates and my professor are going to read this thing. They're going to know this really vulnerable, painful part of my life.

I'm panicking. I'm tempted to just write something fake and superficial instead, but I know the best work comes from truth. How do you guys deal with this? How do you separate the writer from the writing?

A few things I'm trying to tell myself:
  • They're judging the essay, not my life. They're looking at sentence structure and imagery, not analyzing my family drama.
  • Everyone in that room is also terrified. We're all in the same boat.
  • My professor has read hundreds of these. She's a professional. She's not going to be weird about it.
But the anxiety is still there. What if they pity me? What if they think I'm being dramatic? What if it's awkward in class afterward?

Does anyone have experience with this? How do you hand over something so personal and just... sit there while someone reads it? Any rituals or mental tricks to detach a little bit? I need to get through this without dropping the class.
 
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The fear never fully goes away, but you get better at working through it. I'm a senior creative writing major and I still get nervous before workshop. Here's what I do:

Read your piece out loud to yourself first. Multiple times. Own it. It's YOUR story. You're the one who lived it AND wrote it. That's power, not weakness.

Also, remember that workshop feedback is about craft. If someone says "this paragraph feels rushed" or "I want more sensory detail here," they're not saying your trauma isn't valid. They're saying the WRITING could be stronger. Separate the two.

And honestly? The people who are weird about it? That's on them. You showed up and did the work. That's braver than most. 👏


 
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