What Do You Fear?
More Imagination than Fact!
Fear is one of the most destructive emotions we experience. It is this emotion often based on our imagination that drives us into poor decisions and unwelcome consequences. You ask, but what can we do about fear? It comes upon me suddenly and oft-times without warning. I grant that sudden unexpected occurrences may bring about a fearful response, no doubt. Consider the fact that even in this instance, there is a space in which, if you keep your rational mind, you can bring that sudden fear into submission to your logical way of thinking.
There is always, no matter how minute, a window that affords time for a decision. This time is bypassed in favor of a snap decision, followed by the incorrect rationale, I had no choice! What we tend to do, and what is ingrained in us is, to decide under the duress of the moment, and our words attempt to justify our judgment and subsequent actions no matter how poor the decision turned out to be. We freely give ourselves over to the emotion of the moment, that could be fear, love, anger, in fact, any emotion at all. Once we give ourselves over to passion, we cease to be in our right mind.
One possible solution is that we should treat our passions in the same manner that we treat someone who is after our money! You would not give your money to just anyone, yet we freely give our mind, our most crucial possession to any fleeting emotional moment.
As I stated earlier, in every situation, there are choices. We may not like the options that are before us, but they remain choices. The reason that we are dismayed at the possibilities presented to us is that we have a preference. We desire to have things the way we think they should be. The absence of the fulfillment our desire causes us to be dismayed. A better approach would be for us to deal with the situation just as it is. If we can eliminate the influence of our desire, we can then rationally deal with the problem at hand. Don’t concern yourself about the way you think things ought to be, concern yourself with the way things are!
Don’t procrastinate! Fear grows stronger with time! You may think that you are getting some relief by putting an unpleasant task aside, but do you find yourself still worrying? Does that project you dread at work get any easier by delaying the start? Doesn’t your fear of the assignment grow stronger, coupled with the added stress of your superior asking for a progress report? Have the strength of character to tackle the job; you might even find that the fear that you have imagined was not at all based in reality. The truth is we suffer more in our imagination than in fact. Don’t let emotional reactions determine your response to events!








