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GetÂting Past Your Fear
This idea is as close to human nature as breathÂing, and someÂhow as we become adults, we resist it.
When you think about human develÂopÂment, it’s all about learnÂing new things, and for most peoÂple, that equates to some level of fear.
PsyÂcholÂoÂgists phrase it, ‘fear of the unknown.’ We all recÂogÂnize the felt-sense of it—heart racÂing, shortÂness of breath, not knowÂing whether to run or to stand and fight. And yet, when you think about it, conÂfronting the unknown is the natÂural state of the newÂborn, and this state conÂtinÂues for some years. Because we canÂnot rememÂber those early days, we also forÂget to think about what it must have been like.
Even parÂents forÂget to rememÂber what the infant / child is going through. For examÂple, I’ve seem parÂents get quite indigÂnant that their six-month-old won’t stop cryÂing, despite the parÂent havÂing told the child how disÂpleasÂing and annoyÂing the cryÂing is. It’s as if the parÂent thinks the child should ‘know better.’
The parÂent forgets—the infant knows nothÂing.
What is actuÂally hapÂpenÂing here is that the parÂent assumes the infant is simÂply a litÂtle adult. Because they can’t rememÂber their own conÂfuÂsion at this young age, they have no frame of refÂerÂence for knowÂing nothÂing. The parÂent assumes the child is just being stubÂborn or evil, when in truth the child is clueless.
HavÂing stated that, I want to look at the sitÂuÂaÂtion as I imagÂine it looks from a child’s perÂspecÂtive. So, for examÂple, the first time a parÂent yells at a child, gets all red-faced, or even gives off a conÂtrolled ‘angry’ vibe, the child is observÂing this totally new thing. The child has no conÂcept of anger, no conÂcept of who the perÂson is (other than ‘that which is an extenÂsion of me that meets my needs’—see last artiÂcle.) All the child knows is that the ‘parent-object’ has shifted, and the energy of the transÂacÂtion ‘feels’ yucky.
Now, by some fluke, the child might stop doing whatÂever set the parÂent off, and the parent’s energy shifts. A memÂory is set, but it is incomÂplete. It goes, “Red face, I feel yucky, so I stop cryÂing, no red face, I feel betÂter.†What is missÂing here is any underÂstandÂing, on the part of the child, of the meanÂing of the parent’s anger.
This is the case for everyÂthing the child learns. Each action is a new one. With depth perÂcepÂtion comes crawlÂing and a fear of falling. With standÂing comes a first sense of balÂance. You might even see this expeÂriÂence if you hapÂpen to be with a child who stands for the first time, wobÂbling, but standing—the look is fear comÂbined with wide-eyed-wonder.
So, we could say that every sinÂgle thing you do had a creÂation point at some prior time. But here is the kicker. IniÂtial learnÂings had no antecedent. In other words, there was no expeÂriÂence before the first one. So, tryÂing to roll over for the first time does not have someÂthing before it.
As soon as the child starts rockÂing side to side, a memÂory (bodÂily) is creÂated. It is only when the child rolls over that the rockÂing is conÂnected to the rolling over. Then, the child knows what to do.
How we funcÂtion in the world is a series of learned behavÂiours, and we get much of it by age 6. This is also the age when many of us begin to have memÂoÂries that linger. (Most of us have few, if any memÂoÂries before age 6 or so. What we do have are memÂoÂries of stoÂries peoÂple told us of those yearly years.)
SomeÂthing else trigÂgers around that time—our abilÂity to imagÂine outÂcomes. Indeed, parÂents begin to push this idea around this age. Prior to that, kids just don’t ‘get’ that action ‘a’ led to result ‘b.’
The infant mind does not have enough data to interÂpoÂlate outÂcomes.
And then, they do.
This becomes a double-edged sword, and in a sense causes the child to slow down the absorpÂtion of clean data. Social presÂsure to behave in tribÂally acceptÂable ways begins to be more aggresÂsively asserted.
My nephew has a 4-year-old. At the least ThanksÂgivÂing DinÂner, mom and dad filled the kid’s plate. The kid wanted someÂthing from every bowl. Turnip was last. My nephew said, “I’ll give you some, but you don’t like turnip, and you won’t eat it.†‘CoinÂciÂdenÂtally,’ my nephew does not eat turnip.
Thus, a seed was planted. Now, maybe the kid never had eaten turnip before. But she was just given a tribal rule, which is even more powÂerÂful than the taste of turnip. That comÂment was comÂpletely unnecÂesÂsary, and actuÂally harmÂful, as the kid ignored the turnip on her plate.
Here comes my point! This sort of life-conditioning is comÂmon. By the time most peoÂple get to adultÂhood, it is difÂfiÂcult for them to try stuff. Every expeÂriÂence proÂposed is vetÂted through years-old tribal filÂters.
You hear these conÂdiÂtionÂings in the absolutes spoÂken. I could never… Women always… chilÂdren should be… I’m a (ChrisÂtÂian, MusÂlim, Jew, BudÂdhist) and we never…
Clients come to learn comÂmuÂniÂcaÂtion. They learn how, and refuse to actuÂally do it with their partÂner. I ask why. “She’s not coopÂerÂatÂing.†“I know he’ll do it for a month, and then stop.†The resisÂtance to doing is two-fold.
First, it is about the fear of tryÂing the new thing. SecÂond, it is the fear of failing.
Yet, if either of those two fears had been in place for us at age one, we would never have learned to walk. Or talk. Or relate.
You might say that who we are is limÂited by what we refuse to conÂsider and do. We are no larger or greater than our fears.
If I think, “She will reject me / leave me…†I will fear riskÂing getÂting to know the perÂson and seeÂing what hapÂpens. If I think, “If I do that, bad things will hapÂpen…†I will never know that expeÂriÂence. (ImagÂine if EdiÂson had thought that about passÂing elecÂtricÂity through tungÂsten, someÂthing never done before…)
At the end of my life, I will be nothÂing more than what I did. It will not matÂter an iota what I thought, wished for, longed for, resisted, or did not try.
I am only what IÂ enact.
I urge my clients to experÂiÂment with everyÂthing life has to offer. Once you have tried a thing, you can choose, from expeÂriÂence, not to repeat it, or to do it difÂferÂently, or to incorÂpoÂrate this thing into your self-definition.
LivÂing life from fear-based limÂiÂtaÂtion is foolÂish. The world needs fearÂless self-explorers, who, in realÂity, are not fearÂless, but rather fear-facers. If you think an act will be uncomÂfortÂable, do it anyÂway. If someÂthing needs sayÂing or doing, say or do it. If you want to explore new terÂriÂtory, buy a map, and get going.
Because livÂing a tiny, shelÂtered, careÂful life, in the end,
is a useÂless and unprofÂitable way to be.
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Tagged with: Buddhism • Fear • Human nature • Learning • Self-responsibility • Transpersonal Therapy • Zen Approaches


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