A Quote by Thia Megia

Once I'm on stage, the energy of the crowd wipes my nerves away. — © Thia Megia
Once I'm on stage, the energy of the crowd wipes my nerves away.
It's dangerous to get calm. You need some nerves to work from, it's good energy. It's not good to have no nerves. You'd fall asleep on stage.
The most fun moments are being on the stage and seeing how the crowd reacts to your music. The energy of the crowd that makes you just want to go in and keep doing it and be a part of this forever.
When I'm doing a set as an artist I'm right in front of the stage the entire time, interacting with the crowd. The DJ set's a little different but they both are great and high energy for the crowd.
Once you reach the knockout stage of a World Cup, the team that holds its nerves wins.
You have to give the crowd energy to feed off of and they will give it back. If you go on stage acting sluggish and nonchalant, that's how the crowd will be. But if you let them know you appreciate them and do call and response, you'll get a good reception.
There's a lot of nerves. It all goes away though once they say "fight".
My nerves before a gig got worse; I had terrible bad nerves all the time. Once we started... I was fine.
I suffer greatly from nerves. I have stage-fright badly, and it gets worse, but the stage is still my life.
With dance, you learn to channel nerves into energy, excited energy.
As for the stage fright, it never goes away. When I'm waiting in the wings to go on, it's agony every single time but I stay focused and I know that once I'm on stage it'll be fine; I'll be in my happy little bubble.
I enjoy fights the most once them nerves go away and you settle into the fight. That's when you can have your fun and be creative and just kind of be yourself.
When I'm on stage, my interaction with the audience is something that really makes me come alive. It's a feeling like no other. The energy of the crowd fuels something new inside.
I once got my stiletto caught in my horse's tail on stage and went flying into the audience. It was a mental gig, so I think the crowd thought it was part of the show.
I stand on stage hoping to give good energy to the audience, but if I cannot give good energy anymore, I will have to leave right away.
When you go into a different stadium, you know there's no home crowd, there's no energy coming from the crowd for your side.
Every crowd is different. But that's something that I enjoy, and you can feel it in the first few seconds when you walk out on stage. You know, how a crowd is.
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