« Three Tips To Balance Your Life Now! | Home | 3 Ways To Be Happy Now »
Conquer Your Fears For Personal Success
By admin | June 2, 2009
“Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear – not absence of fear.” – Mark Twain (pseudo. of Samuel Langhorne Clemens 1835 – 1910), American author and humorist.
Have you ever felt overwhelmed by fear?
So full of fear that it prevented you from doing something you wanted or needed to do? Unfortunately, this a common problem faced by many people daily.
Fear has the power to prevent you from attaining you personal success goals. It can prevent you from taking risks, following your dreams, or becoming a success at your chosen profession. If you allow it to control you for long enough, it can eventually erode your quality of life and keep you locked in a prison of inactivity.
Fear is nothing more than a conditioned response. It’s a natural reaction to a frightening or unfamiliar situation. While it is usually automatic, there are things you can do to overcome it.
1) Check your expectations.
One major contributor of fear is the prevalence of negative expectations. Do you usually find yourself expecting the worst in every situation? Do you worry obsessively about what could go wrong, rather than focusing on your strengths and capabilities?
If you make a conscious effort to expect the best, see the positive side of each situation and keep reminding yourself that you can handle more than you often think, you’ll find yourself with much less fear to deal with. Even if feelings of fear do manage to creep into your consciousness, you’ll still be able to keep them in perspective and balance them against an underlying sense of confidence.
2) Discredit your fear.
Experts will tell you that the majority of things you fear will never come to pass anyway. While this may be true, it sure doesn’t feel that way when fear has a choke-hold on you! However, if you look a little more closely at your fears when they arise, you may be able to dismiss at least a few.
For example, if you have a fear of public speaking and your boss wants you to give a presentation at work, you might feel like your life (and perhaps your livelihood) is on the line. You may fear getting fired, or worry that your colleagues will lose respect for you if you don’t do a good job.
But is any of this likely to happen? In most cases, no. Rather than worrying about what “might” happen if you don’t give a solid presentation, you might brainstorm ways to help improve your performance, such as finding a coach, being well prepared, practicing your delivery on friends and family members, writing notes to yourself and so on.
3) Do the very thing you fear.
When you remember that fear is simply a feeling, it loses much of its power. It can’t harm you and except in truly threatening situations you can choose to ignore it and move forward anyway.
If you weigh the pros and cons in any situation, you may decide that the possibility of negative consequences is minimal so there’s nothing to stop you from ignoring your fear and going for it! This will be determined by you on a case by case basis, of course. The point isn’t to become reckless with your decision-making but rather to empower yourself to know when a fear is groundless and easily overcome.
Wishing you a larger life,
BB
Related posts
Topics: belief, happiness, preparation | 1 Comment »
June 3rd, 2009 at 10:20 am
BB – I’d like to add to #3, that the reason why doing the thing you fear is NOT because one becomes desensitized via exposure to that which is feared.
The real reason is because one discovers firsthand with direct experience that there is “no monster hiding under the bed” after all.
Best,
David Portney