See also: Anxiety, Nervousness, Worry

What Is It About?

Napkin Version

Fear is one of our most primitive emotions, delivering a fast instinctive reaction to combat a threat.  It usually moves us into rapid action or keeps us frozen until we can determine a better approach, so Fear is a healthy part of our survival toolbox. 

In modern living, the triggers for Fear are more often found regarding longer term survival threats such as financial difficulties, or anything that may impact our sense of security and safety e.g. our connection with friends and family, reputation in the community, etc. 

The intensity of Fear can be affected by the perceived size of the threat, any underlying Fears triggered e.g any related past traumas, as well as our more general (baseline) Fears e.g. fear of death, rejection, pain, etc.  It reduces with the degree of relevant capability we feel we have for the situation.

Being a survival-oriented emotion, our initial Fear-based reaction is usually very instinctive.  This can be anywhere between chaotic panic and highly effective, depending on our past experiences and capability.

The deeper our capabilities and experience goes for the situation, the more we can relax and trust ourselves and our ‘instinctive’ reactions more. 

In a similar way, if we have a broad range of capabilities and helpful experiences across a variety of situations, our instinctive response will be more able to draw upon any transferable skills and knowledge. 

Having this kind of toolbox within ourselves, gives us a lower baseline level of fear, and a general sense of confidence in every day life.

Handling Fear

In The Moment

Training our brain to use a relevant process helps us to focus more effectively and move on more easily. Using it often will also help our brain to catch Fear sooner, making it easier to manage.

Self-Reflection

If the emotion feels quite troubling, it’s usually worth checking if something else is going on first.

By resolving things in ourselves and clearing any other residual emotions, we can reduce the intensity of the emotion - now and when we encounter it again in future. 

Doing so also makes us less likely to ‘attract’ other difficulties that leave us feeling the same way.

See the Processing and Clearing an Emotion page for a generic process to resolve and clear an emotion.

Working Through Fear

The actions we choose to take in response to an emotion can make a significant difference to how well we adjust and move on from it.

The more we take genuine actions that are uplifting and ‘right’ i.e., are good for ourselves and everyone else (including the environment and other living beings) - for now, and over the long-term, the better our experience of life becomes.

If we have time to work through our Fear, the different ways we do so will vary with the scenario, and what we are wanting to achieve:

Clearing Residual Fear

Emotional energy can stick with us, even after we have worked through and resolved whatever caused it.

There are a number of ways we can clear the energy, including doing something physical in nature, imagining the emotion leaving our body, or for more intense emotions, there is a variety of different therapies and alternative forms of energy healing that can also help.