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Become Fearless
Keith Rosen
Although we may want to better our lives and accelerate our productivity, many of our decisions are governed by fear. We want more, but avoid risks, so we continually produce similar results over again. We fear change, for we may lose some degree of control over the outcome. We fear expressing how we feel or what matters most to us, in fear that it would make us vulnerable. We fear leaving what’s predictable and comfortable, although it may not be best for us. We fear not having and not getting, having what we want and losing it, even getting what we want and no longer wanting it!
We resist what we don’t understand, preventing growth by staying with what’s familiar and safe. We even do things or don’t engage in certain activities in the hope of avoiding fear. Resisting the fear of the unknown paralyzes our efforts to create greater opportunities for ourselves.
Ironically, most of our fears are not based on logic or reality. They are not real. Granted, the feeling of fear is very real and I’m certainly not disputing that. Fear is just another feeling, like happy, angry, frustrated, excited, or sad. These feelings often trigger a physiological reaction. Like these other feelings, our body’s reaction to the feeling of fear manifests in a variety of ways; an elevated pulse or heart beat, temporary paralysis, a knot in our stomach, neck, or back, even perspiration.
There are actually two parts that make up the experience of fear. However, we often collapse these two parts together. If one component of fear is the feeling of fear, the other part of fear is that which we actually fear or the trigger that sends us into fear.
Because most of us collapse what we fear and the feeling of fear together without distinguishing between these two parts, we have a tendency to resist fear and make it our adversary rather than embracing fear as an ally.
We’re all familiar with the three points in time: the past, the present, and the future. That which we fear is only the negative expectation or assumption of what may happen in the future (what we don’t want to happen) and what is never happening in the present.

smile
4 months ago
232 comments
Sounds alot like Plato's way of thinking. For example, Just because you see the apple sitting on the table in front of you doesn't mean that it is actually there? I think sometimes people need to face their fear before they can overcome it.
medsells
10 months ago
6 comments
FEAR False Evidence Appearing Real
Medsells in Minnesota
Back at Ya
Housenh
about 1 year ago
8 comments
Fear.... its what seperates the winners from the losers.
rich34232
about 1 year ago
888 comments
face your fear until fear itself goes away. I love this saying
flowergirlmt
about 1 year ago
48 comments
NO FEAR!!!
Hurricanemurph
about 1 year ago
52 comments
FEAR IS THE BIGGEST WASTE OF TIME IN OUR LIVES. Great Article Keith
joena
about 1 year ago
2 comments
Excellent article! Thank you for your insight. I will apply what I read to my own life and profession.
ayoadegboye
about 1 year ago
10 comments
This is inspiring, i will share it with my team members right away.
as for the author, thumb up for you.
ayoadegboye
about 1 year ago
10 comments
This is inspiring, i will share it with my team members right away.
as for the author, thumb up for you.