• Using Fear to Awaken Courage

    This meditation can help us understand our fear and serve as a catalyst to awaken the dormant courage within.  Through the process of accepting, tolerating, and maybe even embracing feelings of fear, we get to potentially discover aspects of strength and boldness that we perhaps have never experienced before.

  • Using Fear to Deepen Intimacy

    Learn how to cultivate intimacy when your partner has fears. Be present. Be grateful.  By providing your loved one with your tender presence, it will convey safety, peace and trust. Allow yourself to be open and vulnerable, instead of stuck in a persona. Allow your loved one to be OK exactly where they are, with their fears and feelings.

  • Introduction

    Fear is a complex emotion that can either signal a vital warning or be an exaggerated, even imagined, threat. The first and most important step, as with all emotions, is to clearly identify it. This might sound simple, but often, fear hides beneath layers of thoughts and feelings, making it elusive. Therefore, it’s crucial to explore all the hidden corners of our minds and lives to recognize where fear exists.

    Once we’ve identified our fear, the next essential task is to discern whether it is a genuine warning sign or a misleading detour that brings unnecessary suffering. This distinction is critical and can be incredibly beneficial. It’s rarely a matter of black or white;  sometimes, we need to recognize when fear is minor or manageable.

    We will explore several key questions to help clarify our fears. For example, how often have you experienced this fear, and how often has it actually come to pass? A common scenario is the fear of medical tests—where a minor fear is natural, but many of us experience it as a much more frightening event than necessary. Often, our fears are tied to past traumas, or even the traumas of others within our families.

    Our exploration will not only focus on identifying fear but also on meeting it with acceptance, intelligence, and, above all, courage. It may seem counterintuitive, but the goal isn’t always to eliminate fear. Instead, we’ll learn how to coexist with it, guided by meditations and teachings that help us access both our fear and our courage.
    In relationships, fear can actually be a doorway to deeper intimacy, especially when both partners are experienced in communication and navigating life’s challenges together. Fear is something we all face at times, and when we can be held and supported during those moments, it can lead to profound closeness and connection.

    Making friends with our fear, and learning how to respond to it in our thoughts, attitudes, and actions, is a treasure worth exploring. It’s often said that the only thing to fear is fear itself. We would add that what’s equally important is how we respond to fear, and whether our response genuinely supports our well-being.

  • How to Develop Self Caring and Wisdom When Dealing With Fear

    “Would you try to feel worse than you already do?”

    I ask this (seemingly) absurd question whenever a friend, a client, or even I am experiencing and feeling deep suffering. I ask them this question to help them understand their current attitude about their suffering — and that there’s potential for them to learn and emphasize a friendlier, more self-compassionate dialogue with their negative feelings. 

    “Why the hell would I do that? It’s already bad enough!” is a frequent, angry response. Inevitably, there is initial bewilderment and confusion. This is when I explain that my intention to help them (and us all) supports a capacity to observe our feelings. This importance of developing self-tolerance and self-acceptance helps them realize that they’re not putting themselves in a painful feeling on purpose. 

    This little exercise makes it clear that we aren’t wishing an unfortunate situation or feeling on ourselves. This awareness frees up energy to inquire: how can we best take care of ourselves in this challenging situation? 

    Over time, this question can also serve as a long-term reminder that we aren’t making ourselves unhappy on purpose (rather than it being a fleeting moment of awareness). 

    When we ask that question above, it slowly and steadily leads us to greater empathy, wisdom, self-acceptance, and self-compassion. 

    “I know you’re not doing this on purpose.”

    “I’m sorry you have to go through this.”

    “This is really hard/This would be hard for anyone else too.”

    Statements like these are a sign of empathy and caring towards ourselves, making it easier to care for ourselves and still do whatever we need to do to make whatever situation we’re facing the best possible one. 

    Time for reflection — when could I have cared better for myself?

    I encourage you to take a moment to pause and think about a current situation in your life where you could have cared for yourself like this. Really pause — and let yourself think of the sentence that would’ve been the most self-caring and useful in the situation that you were facing. In time, this practice will help you care more deeply and stop you from unwittingly injuring yourself through critical comments and judgments. 

    This might sound simple and easy, but most of us were raised quite differently. At best, we’ve only been taught to identify the feelings and what we’re going through first. Only after that might we develop a supportive dialogue with helpful guiding thoughts beyond the illusions our feelings currently make us believe. However, when we recognize that challenging times and feelings often feel like they’ve put a spell on us. It’s counter-instinctual for almost all of us to find this kind of caring for ourselves at this time. 

    Don’t underestimate the importance of this life-long work and the improved quality of life it offers us all. Through this creative and constructive inner communication, you’ll teach yourself how this ongoing inner dialogue helps you to organically and gradually lessen the stranglehold that distorted and irrational feelings like fear, anger, and anxiety have on you. In time, you will gradually dis-identify from the feelings of fear and, most importantly, the harmful, repetitive, catastrophic thinking.  

    All this will inevitably expand your quality of life, and it can only be done by first facing your feelings and developing a caring and realistic thought process. It is hard to realize that the feelings aren’t the major source of suffering but is the follow-up thoughts that significantly distort what you’re facing and can catapult you from fear to terror, anxiety to panic, and anger to rage.

    Here’s a real-life example from my client’s life to make this clearer:

    My client’s daughter had discovered a lump in her breast that the doctor wanted to do a biopsy on. The daughter was 32 and had a routine mammogram showing a 2-3 cm-sized lump.  

    I knew that due to his previous medical issues, he was more susceptible to his fear being magnified into terror, even though facts indicated there wasn’t a serious danger of severe illness, according to the doctors. 

    After sharing an empathic response that it must be scary, I asked my client a couple of questions. As someone familiar with breast cancer, I asked him if the tumor was near the lymph nodes or the chest wall. I knew these locations were more at risk for danger beyond the breast. He had been reassured that the lymph nodes were clear and the lump was not near the chest wall. 

    My client came in and told me about the situation with his daughter and was crying in what felt like a life-and-death terror and panic. He told me, “I’m so terrified that my only daughter might die from this. I can’t believe this is happening to her!”

    I knew that I couldn’t just tell him directly that the odds were massively in his daughter’s favor — he was in the middle of a feeling that didn’t reflect what he had told me the doctors had conveyed to him. 

    I validated his feelings by often saying, “I can really understand how scary this is.” 

    He replied, “It’s terrifying.” 

    I was careful not to use words like ‘terrifying’ because it was clear the worst-case scenario wouldn’t be death but a lumpectomy if the biopsy came back positive. 

    He came in for the second session and was even more anxious as his daughter was going in for the biopsy in a couple of days. I had been seeing this client for many years, and we already had been through enough medical scares that I could reflect back to him that it’s important not to jump too far ahead and really try to listen to what the doctors had told him.  

    “I’m trying, but it’s just so damn scary that this could be more serious than what they know. It can happen, as nobody really knows.”  

    At this time, I began focusing on the thoughts that followed the feelings of fear and panic. I said with as much gentleness as possible, “George, you remember the other scares you’ve been through before? Do you remember how you had a hard time letting in the specific reassurance that you had gotten from your doctors?” 

    “It’s my daughter this time and it’s different, he protested.”  

    I followed this with, “That’s particularly why you want to try to be careful with what you’re thinking. It would be good to do your best to let in the reassurance with the information you’ve been given as much as possible, as your daughter is likely to pick up on your feelings. I know it’s hard.”  

    He stayed silent, seemingly unable to let in what I was saying. At this point, I decided that the benefits outweighed the risks of being direct with him.

    “George, you seem to be reacting like your daughter’s life is in jeopardy, and it seems clear from what you told me that your doctors believe the worst-case scenario is a lumpectomy. I know this would still be extremely disturbing.”   

    “Yes, he said, “but they don’t really know.”   

    Before you continue reading, please pause for a second and apply the feelings talked about in this situation to your life. If nothing comes to mind, it’s a good idea to remember this for when (similar)  future situations arise.

    Be careful in what you say to yourself in difficult situations

    I realized it was vital that I start to really address directly that he was reacting out of a fear of loss and the disease spreading — none of this was realistic, according to the doctors.  

    I continued, “George, you need to be careful in what you say to yourself. You’re making yourself even more terrified than what you’ve heard — more than what could be the worst-case scenario.”  

    He didn’t know whether to yell at me for being insensitive or thank me for the reassurance from the mixed emotions I saw in his facial expression. Finally, after a pause, he said with resistance, “I guess you’re probably right, but it’s so hard.”  

    “Yes,” I agreed and continued to tell him, “the stakes are very high, not only physically but also emotionally. What do you think about repeating what the doctors have told you? We are not talking about the biopsy revealing a danger beyond a lumpectomy, and we just don’t know if it is cancerous.”

    After repeating this several times over the next couple of days until right before the biopsy, he finally asked me, “What would you say to yourself?”  

    I told him I’d tell myself: “I know I’m scared of that lump being cancerous, but at least I’ve been reassured that it isn’t near any dangerous areas. In fact, I know that I would be shocked if it was a danger beyond removing it with a lumpectomy. There is only a 5-10% chance it’s cancerous.”

    He seemed to take these words in and kept repeating them to himself again and again. He stressed that it was very difficult, but saying this made him calmer amidst the anxiety. Over the next few hours, his state of terror and panic changed to one of anxiety and worry (which was a large shift from where he’d been).

    This was the beginning of his development over the next five years, and the doctors were right after all — the lump wasn’t cancerous, and his daughter was fine. However, the progression of his ability to see how his thoughts fed his emotions of terror continued to be illuminated over time, especially during the next three health scares around him.

    Can you identify how your thoughts positively or negatively impact your feelings & actions?

    While this story is about George and his scary feelings, it’s also about you and me. Understanding how our thoughts impact our feelings and emotions, especially how they amplify them, can help us see what’s important. This is a life-long practice — unless you are naturally balanced and keenly aware, most of us tend to make things harder for ourselves during challenging moments. So it’s a vital focus to see how our mind and the subsequent thoughts can be a negative emotion amplifier or a realistic reassurer. 

    The point isn’t to get over fear or even our thoughts of fear. The point is to realize we can’t change our feelings directly more often than not. However, we can learn to change our thoughts and focus them more on the reality we’re facing. The idea is to keep them focused on the present and not exaggerate the scary or anxious future scenarios. 

    This is a major journey to learning about ourselves and how to develop courage, wisdom, and self-compassion. There is no shame here, just the foresight to realize the immense impact our thinking has on how we feel about certain situations. We can change our thoughts about our feelings, but we can rarely change the feelings ourselves. This is a golden key that can be applied not only to illness or fear of dying but also to anything that presents as scary to us.  

    We are all human and face a mortal existence; our culture tends to deny this. This denial impacts many people (probably you), and our emotions and thoughts often overreact to or suppress reality in difficult times. We all need to do our best to have the courage to face reality in front of us and see that our minds can be our best friends or our worst enemies.

    We need to help ourselves, our families, and our friends. If you’re interested in developing this capacity to care for yourself better, I encourage you to watch the Friendly Mind guided meditations and read Chapter Two in Awareness that Heals — after all, a friendly mind can be one of our greatest allies in life.

  • Using Fear as a Catalyst for Building Courage and or Safety

    Using Fear as a Catalyst for Building Courage and or Safety

    Using Fear as a Catalyst for Building Courage and or Safety - ATH Blog

    Fear, like all emotions, poses as the truth

    They give the false impression that it is representative of a true perspective. This is so important for all of us to see as clearly as possible as our emotions have hypnotic effects that all too frequently puts us under their spell.  If we can look at our past experience and see this it gives us a chance to do some reality testing to see that the amount of times that our fears indicate realistic assessments of the danger we are facing is minimal at the least. This can give  us the potential to develop a counter voice that will be able to say something like, “Fear I see you and you have been wrong 99 out of the last 100 times you have arisen.” This is particularly true when it comes to health or an area where we have wounded self-esteem, and rejection issues to name just a few areas. We are not talking about simple fears like avoiding putting your hand in a fire or hitting the brakes when a car comes too close to you. We are focusing on future events that are not happening in the present moment.

    As we see this tendency it highlights the importance of developing a way of relating to our fears so that they don’t have the same power to run our thoughts, reactions, and actions. The central direction that we want to develop is the ability to first experience the fear consciously and see the fear clearly, and then to bring this observation to enable us to speak in a way that is both honoring the vulnerability of the fear and at the same time cultivate a sense of caring and courage to be embraced with the fear. This doesn’t mean that we are telling the fear that it is right.  We are instead letting the fear know that we aren’t generating the fear on purpose and that we want to learn how to take care of ourselves when we are frightened.  

    We will frequently want to say things like, “Fear I am experiencing you and I feel very vulnerable, yet I want you to know that I accept you or at the very least I am doing my best to be tolerant. I see the benefits of holding you in a softer way and the paradox is that the more I can care for you, the less I will believe that you have a monopoly.  I can start to develop the capacity to be afraid and have a response that cares both for you and wants to develop the capacity to find our courage at the same time.”

    If you are afraid that you might be rejected by your lover, You can say to yourself, “I can see this fear, and both notice if there are clear-cut signs that this is likely” and I can also ask myself, How can I best care for both the fear and the relationship at the same time.” This is a way to both honor the fear and starts to develop a type of courage and wisdom at the same time.

    This might sound impossible especially if you haven’t done a good deal of work on yourself. The ideal is to allow both the fear and the courage to be as close to simultaneous as possible. In the beginning, it is a major victory to even recognize the next day or week that courage could still be available when fear is present.  This is a great starting point. No matter whether this is a relatively new idea for you or one that you are familiar with, I don’t think any of us can rationally underestimate both the benefit and the evolutionary development this represents.

    It is important that we greet whatever our emotions are with a receptive observation

    We can say something like, “It is perfectly natural for you to be afraid, and I am here to look at whether this is reflecting an overprotection/exaggeration or simply a warning that I need to take healing steps or gather the courage to accept the danger I’m facing.”

    This may sound obvious, but when fear arises, if you look closely you’ll likely see that fear often isn’t accompanied by support and realistic observation. This is a very healthy dialogue that we each can teach ourselves to develop.  The tendency to be semi-paralyzed or even frozen by fear can make it hard to even remember that we have other parts of ourselves that can be of immense benefit. Once we remember we can ask guiding questions that will seek greater courage while we’re afraid requires a great deal of practice. It isn’t just an intellectual realization for it to be really helpful.  It is more like a marathon or an athletic event where we need to have a lot of repetitions in order to withstand the shock of fear hitting our system and not being knocked over by it. We can learn to have something like a Pavlovian response when fear arises . . . REMEMBER COURAGE. I have encouraged myself, friends, and clients to repeat the mantra fear/courage fear/courage to help remind the subconscious to remember this potential that we all have especially when we’re blindsided.

    Many of us have believed that it is hard enough to even stay aware of one part of ourselves at a time.  However, with practice and the intention to care for ourselves, it will become obvious that we can be aware of the fear and take great interest in our best ways to guide ourselves and what thoughts, qualities and actions will most likely take care of our needs during these times.

    It is helpful to realize if your tendency is to either suppress your fears, stew in them or periodically vacillate in both ways.  When you see yourself suppressing you want to be an encouraging voice that will say, “Have the courage to stay stably aware of your fear.” If you are stewing and obsessing in them then it will be very helpful to say, as kindly as possible, “I see that you are afraid and it’s necessary to balance this out with thoughts, actions, and qualities that will help you deal with them. What are the ones that will help?” This is not a punishment, and the tone will make it clear that it is a form of self-compassion or caring.  It’s not ever necessary to get over the fear, but it is necessary to support the capacity to be transparent and resourceful in your response to it.

    Articulate your specific and general relationship to fear

    How would you do this? There are so many possibilities and of course, each of us is likely to respond to different types and levels of fear differently. As I name several common ways of responding see which ones you most identify with and the ways you respond. You might suppress it, be consumed by it, intellectualize it without feeling, you may withdraw or get angry, or become depressed (a very common reaction as when fear is happening and we don’t recognize it, most commonly it will leave us withdrawn and tired mysteriously)  and many more.

    Each of us will want to develop a common strategy, ask ourselves the question of “How Can We Best Take Care of Ourselves” and have a verbal response that is helpful.

    If you are suppressing the fear and become aware of it then encourage yourself to stay aware and feel the fear as long as it takes for it to be registered and then ask “How can I support myself to feel both the fear and start to bring courage?”

    If you are consumed, then let yourself say, “Fear I see you and you are not all of me. I am now going to focus on what thoughts and actions will support me to find courage.”

    If you withdraw let yourself see and say, “I see you are withdrawing from your fear and I want to feel it so that I can recognize and go for the need for strength and courage.”

    If you’re depressed let yourself say, “Depression I feel for you and can you see that you are actually depressed because you aren’t feeling your fear.” Let yourself feel the fear and notice how it affects depression. Now see what your wisest thoughts are to guide you to take good care of your fear in terms of thoughts and actions.”

    If you’re defensively angry then you say something like, “I see that you are getting angry and I can see you really are afraid underneath.” Feel the fear and ask how you can best care for yourself while you’re afraid.

    If you intellectualize it then encourage yourself to direct your thoughts. Move from the mind to feel the fear and take feel the tremble or quiver. Ask yourself, “How can I take the next step to experience the fear and guide myself to the thoughts and actions to access a starting point of courage.”

    It’s important to see the need for at least a brief dialogue between the fear and the part of you that can see it. This establishes the beginning of independence from fear and yet develops a relationship. Our ability to have a dynamic relationship with our fears opens the door to actively taking care of ourselves, rather than just being taken over by them consciously or unconsciously. So much of the suffering that we and the world experience is a result of fear staying compartmentalized. By supporting this dynamism we put ourselves in a realistic position to accept the fear and develop our capacity to care for ourselves and develop courage.

    For greater detailed support read chapter 7 in the book Awareness That Heals called “Moving From Feelings to Needs” and listen to the ATH podcast episode  17.

  • Fear and Courage

    Fear and Courage

    This guided meditation helps you explore the relationship between courage and fear and how to transform it to
    be able to reside
    primarily in your courage.