Maybe if I demonstrate that I will actually respond to your Skribit requests, you will make more of them! I think making anonymous requests an option would help too, but that's another story...
OK, stagefright. It's a little known fact, but I used to get TERRIFIED right before going onstage. And not just right before. I would have this sense of dread all day, from the moment we arrived at the venue until we played. It usually went away when the show started, but if I was having a bad night, it would just cripple me.
So what happened? We were doing a show with Jars of Clay in about 1995. Because it was near Atlanta, they wanted to play first, even though they were the bigger draw at the time. So during their set, I stood out and watched the show. I was having fun. I looked around and saw that everyone else was having fun. And it felt like God was saying "Mark, why don't you just do THAT when we go onstage?". Then instead of dreading the performance, I was looking forward to a time when I got to have fun doing what I loved to do.
So do I get stagefright now? No, not in the traditional sense. If anything, there are nights when I wish I had it, just a little bit. It helps to focus, and I want every time I go onstage to MATTER. I don't want to act like it doesn't...
Do I get nervous before going onstage nowadays? You bet. But it's not in the traditional "stagefright" kind of way. I can let myself get worried about technical things. What if my gear's not working? I just have to trust the team I have around me, that my guitar tech and the rest of the crew are going to be looking out for us. I still get nervous before we play a new song - I don't want to mess it up and let everybody down. So when we're doing the first night of a new tour and there are a bunch of new songs and a lot of technical things to think about, I'm a ball of nerves!
One more thing: TV. I don't get nervous when I'm playing on TV, but I do get nervous in the time leading up to it. So, with two TV performances in the next week, I ain't gonna lie to you: I'm nervous! The key is to not think negative thoughts, and to channel the nervous energy into the performance...
ADDENDUM: I don't think I clarified this well enough, but I think there's a big difference between "game day jitters" and true stagefright. Being a little nervous before something is OK, even healthy. It makes you take it seriously and it makes you prepare. True stagefright comes from a different place. That's the enemy - the voice that's telling you you're not good enough.
As you were...