Social anxiety loosens its grip when you (1) stop safety behaviors that feed it, (2) shift attention outward, and (3) practice graded exposures daily—tiny, repeatable reps. Below you’ll find 7 plug-and-play scripts, 4 therapy tools, 10 micro-habits, a 7-day starter plan, and a simple scoreboard to track real progress. If you want structure and weekly momentum, Momentum Psychology can guide you step-by-step (in person or online).

Read more: Is it Time to Consult an Anxiety Therapist? Signs You Shouldn’t Ignore
Why social anxiety sticks—and how therapy unsticks it
Social anxiety isn’t a “shy personality.” It’s a learned loop:
- Trigger: a class discussion, a meeting, walking into a room.
- Alarm: “They’ll judge me.” Heart rate spikes; mind scans for danger.
- Safety behavior: phone-checking, over-rehearsing, hiding at the edges, avoiding eye contact, leaving early.
- Short relief → Long-term cost: you feel safer now, but your brain “learns” the situation was dangerous, so fear grows.
Therapy flips the loop by teaching you to approach (in tiny steps), shift attention outward, and limit post-event rumination. The practical stack we use at Momentum Psychology blends CBT, exposure planning, attention training, and implementation intentions (if X, then I’ll do Y). You’ll practice small actions daily, not heroic leaps once a month.
Read more: How to Help Someone with Anxiety: 5 Compassionate Techniques
7 practical scripts (copy, paste, practice)
Each script includes when to use it, exact words, why it works, and a tiny upgrade once it feels easier. Practice them out loud before you need them—your brain performs what it rehearses.
1) Two-Hello Opener (entering a room or event)
- When: You’ve just arrived, feel awkward, and don’t know what to say.
- Say: “Hi—I’m [Name]. I’m new here. What brings you to this event?”
- Why it works: Identity + a simple open question moves attention outward and invites short answers.
- Upgrade: Add one fact: “I’m into [topic]/I work in [field]; anything good I should check out here?”
2) Join-a-Group Pivot (approaching 2–3 people talking)
- When: A small cluster is chatting and you’re hovering.
- Say: “Hey, I’m [Name]. Mind if I listen in for a minute?” (pause) “Curious—what’s been most interesting about [topic] so far?”
- Why it works: Permission lowers pressure; curiosity gets you included quickly.
- Upgrade: Reflect one sentence (“So the workshops rotate hourly?”) then ask a follow-up.
3) Mind-Blank Rescue (when words vanish)
- When: You freeze mid-sentence or can’t think of a reply.
- Say: “I lost my train of thought—what were you saying about [their last word]?”
- Why it works: Hands the floor back, buys time, and shows listening (not failure).
- Upgrade: Summarize and confirm: “So you meant [x]—did I get that right?”
4) Exit Gracefully (ending a conversation without awkwardness)
- When: You’ve chatted long enough and want to move.
- Say: “Great meeting you. I’m going to grab water—hope to see you around later.”
- Why it works: A clean, honest exit prevents anxious over-staying or sudden escapes.
- Upgrade: Offer a simple connect hook: “Are you on LinkedIn/IG?”
5) Post-Event Rumination Stopper
- When: Your brain replays “cringe” moments.
- Say (to yourself): “Name it: post-event thinking. One win, one repeat, one tweak—then done.”
- Why it works: Labels the habit and replaces endless replay with a 60-second review.
- Upgrade: Schedule a rumination window tomorrow at 9:00 a.m.—no replay at night.
6) Boundary on Reassurance Seeking
- When: You want to text “Was I weird?” to a friend.
- Say (to your support person): “If I ask for reassurance tonight, please ask me: ‘What’s one thing you did well?’ I’ll answer once, then we’ll switch topics.”
- Why it works: Limits reassurance (which feeds anxiety) and builds your own evidence.
- Upgrade: Log three small wins before bed (phone note).
7) Ask-for-the-Thing (daily courage rep)
- When: Everyday situations (store, class, office, café).
- Say: “Could I get a glass of water too?” / “Is this seat open?” / “Can I join this study group?”
- Why it works: Low-stakes “approach reps” rewire avoidance.
- Upgrade: Track two asks/day for one week.
Read more: Managing Anxiety: Therapeutic Techniques for Success
Tools you’ll use in therapy (download-ready frameworks)
1) Exposure Ladder with MVA (Minimum Viable Action)
Build 8 steps from easy to hard (distress/SUDS 20 → 80). For each step, define the tiniest action that counts—your MVA. If you can’t do the MVA, the step is too big.
Template columns: Situation • SUDS (0–100) • MVA • Safety behavior to drop • Exit rule • Result
Example (joining a group):
- Step 1: Stand near a pair for 30 seconds (SUDS 25); MVA = one “Hey.”
- Step 2: Ask, “Mind if I listen in for a minute?” (SUDS 35).
- Step 3: Ask one curiosity question (SUDS 45).
- Step 4: Reflect + follow-up (SUDS 50).
- …and so on until you’re contributing naturally (SUDS 70–80 initially, then dropping with practice).
2) Safety-Behavior Audit
List the top five safety behaviors (e.g., phone-checking, over-rehearsing, whisper-talking, leaving early, standing in corners). Choose one to drop each week and replace it with a skill: outward attention, a script, or a breathing cue.
Quick table: Safety behavior • When it shows up • Replacement skill • Success rate (0–10)
3) Attention Training (ATA)
Anxiety yanks attention inward. Train it outward with 60-second drills:
- Scan 5-5-5: name five shirt colors, five hair styles, five objects; repeat 3×.
- Sound hunt: identify three distinct sounds.
- Texture check: notice two textures (table edge, fabric) while conversing.
Do one drill on arrival and one mid-event. You’ll feel presence replace self-monitoring.
4) After-Event Review (AER)
Three quick lines—What happened? What helped? What I’ll repeat/tweak next time.
Add a small data point: time on task, people greeted, or SUDS peak. Keep it under two minutes so it’s sustainable.
Read more: Navigating Entrepreneurial Anxiety: Therapy Solutions
10 micro-habits that compound
- Two-Hello Rule: say hello to two people at every event.
- 3-2-1 Eye Contact: make eye contact ~3 seconds with a friendly nod.
- Phone-Away Entry: first five minutes in any room = no phone.
- 30-Second Small Talk: “How do you know the host?” then “What are you working on lately?”
- Compliment + Question: “I like your [x]. Where did you find it?”
- Ask x2 Daily: directions, recommendations, quick favors.
- Doorway Breath Cue: two slow exhales before you walk in.
- Name-Notice-Next: name the feeling, notice one body cue, choose the next tiny action.
- Rumination Window: 10 minutes next morning only; nothing at night.
- Friday Win Log: list three social wins; send one brief thank-you DM.
These habits are intentionally tiny. Small reps change the system faster than occasional big leaps.
Read more: Cultivating Success: Anxiety Therapy for High Achievers
A 7-day starter plan (copy this into your notes)
- Day 1 (Home): Build a 6–8 step exposure ladder (SUDS 20→80). Do ATA 5-5-5 for 60 seconds. Send one Ask-for-the-Thing at a café. AER after.
- Day 2 (Low stakes): Use Two-Hello Opener with two strangers (barista, classmate). Drop one safety behavior (no phone on entry). AER.
- Day 3 (Medium prep): Join one small group with Join-a-Group Pivot; do Mind-Blank Rescue once even if you don’t need it (rehearsal). AER + Friday Win Log draft.
- Day 4 (Practice + Recovery): Repeat Day 2; schedule a rumination window for this morning; none at night.
- Day 5 (Stretch): Attend a meetup for Minimum Viable Attendance (MVA): 20 minutes, two hellos, one question. Use Exit Gracefully. AER.
- Day 6 (Consolidate): Re-run Day 5 or Day 3, whichever felt hardest. Track SUDS start/peak/recovery. AER.
- Day 7 (Reflect): Friday Win Log, total Asks x/day, and a 5-minute ladder review. Plan next week’s steps.
Read more: Balancing Brilliance: Anxiety Therapy for High Achievers
Measure progress so it’s not just a vibe
Make a weekly scoreboard. Review every Sunday.
- Mini Social Anxiety Score: pick a short screener (or simply rate overall social anxiety 0–10).
- SUDS (0–100): record start/peak/recovery for your hardest step.
- Exposure minutes: time spent at events or in conversations (MVA met = yes/no).
- Safety-behavior count: how many times you checked your phone, over-rehearsed, or escaped early.
- Asks per day: # of small requests (goal: 2–3).
- Pivot rule: if two weeks are flat, shrink the step, drop a different safety behavior, or add a therapist-guided session.
Momentum Psychology tracks these with you—steady data makes it obvious what to tweak.
Read more: Academic Anxiety and The Importance of Therapy for Students
How Momentum Psychology structures therapy for social anxiety
- Plan: one clear laddered goal (e.g., “speak in class weekly,” “attend club for 30 minutes”).
- Practice: customize scripts, ATA drills, and exposures with implementation intentions (“If I freeze, then I’ll use Mind-Blank Rescue”).
- Pacing: start where success is likely (SUDS 30–40), then progress gradually.
- Format: in-person or online; brief skills check-ins between sessions if helpful.
- Measurement: short social-anxiety ratings, SUDS curves, time-at-event, and safety-behavior counts—reviewed together so you always know what’s working.
Ready for structure and weekly wins? Book a consult with Momentum Psychology. We’ll turn these scripts into a plan that fits your life.
Read more: Therapy for Entrepreneurs: Addressing Anxiety and Stress
FAQs
Will scripts make me sound fake?
- No—think training wheels while your nervous system learns new patterns. They quickly feel natural.
How fast will I feel better?
- Many notice wins in 3–4 weeks with daily micro-reps and one weekly stretch step.
Can this work over telehealth?
- Yes—exposure planning, scripts practice, and AERs translate well online. You’ll still show up in real-world situations between sessions.
What if I blank in a group?
- Use Mind-Blank Rescue immediately. It buys time and shows genuine interest.
How do I know it’s working?
- Your scoreboard shifts: lower SUDS peaks, fewer safety behaviors, more time engaged, fewer next-day replays.