How to Erase Fearful Feelings from Your Life

Written by Guy Finley

Any seemingly scary condition in your life, whatever it may be, is not the real problem. It’s your reaction to it that has you shaking.  Which is why, if you’ll become truly conscious of a fearful condition instead of afraid of it, you’ll change forever your relationship with fear.

Being conscious of your fear empowers you to interact with it in an entirely new way. This new inner relationship gives you the power to be awake to fear's scary influences, instead of being their unconscious slave. And as each day you discover something new about the shaky nature of your own fearful reactions, they lose their power over you. Why? You see them for what they have always been: unintelligent, mechanical forces.

To be consciously afraid means that you know you are frightened.  You feel it, but at the same time you know that these very fears, as real as they may seem, are not you.

Fear is really nothing other than a self-limiting reaction that we’ve always mistaken for a shield of self-protection. It’s time to let it go, which you can do anytime you want. Here’s how: Dare to proceed, even while being afraid.

Employing this simple but higher instruction will not only show you the strange faces of all those habitual reactions, but it will also empower you to start seeing through them. And, as you’ll gratefully discover, each of your new insights into their actual nature removes some of their power over you. Better yet, their loss is your gain! The following step will help you face those fearful feelings and erase them from your life once and for all.

Fear is really nothing other than a self-limiting reaction that we’ve always mistaken for a shield of self-protection.

Do you know someone whom you would rather run from than run into? Most of us do! Nevertheless, starting right now, resolve never again to avoid any person who scares you. In fact, whether at home or work, go ahead and walk right up to that critical or aggressive person. If you have something to say, without being cruel or rude, say exactly what you want, instead of letting the fear tell you what to do. 

Remember, your aim in working with this step in self-liberation is not to win an ego victory, but rather to watch and learn something new about yourself.  Let that person see you shake, if that’s what starts to happen. What do you care? It’s only temporary. Besides, that unpleasant person before you can’t know it, but you’re shaking yourself awake!  

Stand your inner ground even if it feels as though you might fall through the floor. Allow your reactions to roll by you instead of letting them carry you away as they’ve always done in the past.

If you’ll fight for yourself in this new way, it won’t be the floor beneath you that will open. It will be your inner eyes! And what you see is that this flood of once unconscious reactions has its own life story; a shaky story that up until now you’d taken as your own. But it’s not. You see these fears do not belong to you, and that they never have.

Everything about your life changes in this one moment. Here’s what has been revealed to you: You have never been afraid of another person. The only thing you’ve ever been frightened by is your own thoughts about that person. Yes, you did feel fear, but it wasn’t yours. And it wasn’t towards someone stronger than you. The fear you always felt was in what you thought he or she was thinking about you. You have been afraid of nothing but your own thoughts! Amazing isn’t it?

About the Author:

Guy Finley is an internationally renowned spiritual teacher and bestselling self-help author.  He is the founder and director of Life of Learning Foundation, a nonprofit center for transcendent self-study located in Merlin, Oregon. He also hosts the Foundation’s Wisdom School — an online self-discovery program for seekers of higher self-knowledge. Guy livestreams two free talks a week. Each talk is followed by an open Q&A session. To register visit www.guyfinley.org/letgo.

This article is excerpted from Design Your Destiny by Guy Finley.