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5 Fear-Based Decisions that Limit Our Potential

The Sky is the Limit

“The only thing we have to fear is fear itself . . .” ~Franklin D. Roosevelt

You’ve heard that quote more times than you can count.

You’ve also made fear-based decisions; we all have.

Looking back, you can point to times it has happened and caused you to fall short of what you could have achieved.

It has certainly has happened to me.

I was three years into my first career as a high school science teacher. I had always wanted to live abroad, specifically Mexico, and I had always wanted to learn Spanish (after taking an embarrassing amount in high school and college without really ever picking it up).

So when I met a lady that had a connection to a high school in Monterrey, Mexico, where they taught the classes in English and had an opening for a science/math teacher, I jumped on it.

I contacted the school and expressed an interest. When they told me if I ever came through Monterrey they would be happy to speak to me, I immediately booked a flight and flew down during the upcoming spring break.

I went to the interview and told them I would be happy to teach science or math, or both. They told me about the program, and that they support all of the teachers with intensive Spanish-immersion classes.

It was exactly what I wanted—a way to live in Mexico, learn Spanish, and keep teaching.

I left the interview excited.

A couple months later, they contacted me and told me I had the job if I still wanted it.

Perfect, right? I got exactly what I had been dreaming of.

I turned it down.

I rationalized the decision at the time because I had already told my current school I would be there the next year and had already committed to a trip to Europe with friends that I would have to miss because the school year started earlier in Mexico.

The reality is that my school would have understood and my friends would still be my friends (and Europe wasn’t going anywhere) if I took this opportunity, which I had been talking about for years.

The real reason I didn’t take the job was that I was scared. Scared to move to a new country where I didn’t know anyone. Scared to leave my comfort zone. Just generally scared of the unknown.

Now, looking back, I have a lot of regret about that decision. Over ten years later, I still haven’t lived abroad and I still don’t speak Spanish fluently.

But I have also learned from that experience to push back when fear pops up to stop me from moving forward.
And importantly, I’ve gotten much better at recognizing when it is fear that is stopping me, even when it isn’t so obvious.

And that’s what I want to share with you.

How You Can Target Fear and Beat It

Below are five common, but not-so-obvious, ways fear works to limit our potential.

And importantly, how you can recognize that fear for what it is, and then push through anyway.

1. You procrastinate.

We have a lot of faith (for no apparent reason) that the version of us that wakes up on Monday will start that thing we want to do.

It’s like we believe some other person will be responsible for getting us up and moving.

It’s hard to start now, when we are the ones in charge. Why?

Fear lives in starting. Because starting means one of two things will happen: You will do the thing you set out to do, or you will fail.

And failure is scary; we fear it. So we decide to start later.

The problem is that later is quite elusive. So the change never really happens.

Even though you think you are protecting yourself from failure by procrastinating, you are actually just ensuring it. By not starting, you take success off the table; the only thing left is failure.

The solution is simple, but not easy:

Recognize your procrastination for what it is—you letting fear prevent you from moving forward.

Move anyway. It doesn’t have to be a huge movement, but just do something that commits you to either success or failure.

2. You create your “big-hairy goal” and then wait for the magic to happen.

I know, you’ve been told to set a “big-hairy goal.”

The problem is that the definition of a big-hairy goal is a goal that seems impossible. Because it seems impossible, you don’t actually believe you can achieve it. So you don’t act. You just wait for some cosmic shift to occur.

You are scared that if you act you just will prove that it is impossible. That fear paralyzes you.

To overcome this, you have to set smaller, more approachable goals, after you set the “big-hairy” one. Goals that you see as possible, but that add up to the end game.

Come up with three small goals that you believe are doable and that will get you closer to the “big-hairy goal.” They don’t need to get you there. They just need to head you in the right direction.

When you’re done with those, come up with three more. Keep that up and that almost-impossible goal will become inevitable.

3. You let “emergencies” get in the way.

Have you ever decided that something you’ve been “meaning” to do for months, like organizing your closet, has now become a must-do thing?

You are probably using your newly minted “must-do” task to avoid starting something that might open you up to failure.

While organizing a closet isn’t fun, you aren’t going to fail at it, so it’s not scary. Even though it feels very much like you are being productive, you are actually paralyzed.

If you hear yourself saying things like, “I know I said I would do X today, but I actually can’t because I really need to get Y done first,” you are probably falling victim to this fear-based behavior.

The solution is easy: Realize that you haven’t done Y for the past two months, and so not doing it today will probably be fine and do X instead.

4. You focus on the judgment of others.

As soon as you go from, “This is going to change my life for the better” to “What will so-and-so think about it?” you have almost certainly sunk your chances of moving forward.

Everyone wants the approval of their peers and seeks to avoid their disapproval. But you can’t let fear of disapproval prevent you from acting.

It’s not easy. But, when you feel judged by your peers, and you feel like it is stopping you from moving forward, consider these questions:

  • Does this peer lead a life I value?
  • What values are they using to judge me?
  • Do I even want to live up to those values?

If you don’t want to live up to their values, just shrug off their judgment and move on.

5. You forget that your life is one big science experiment.

Science is all about failure. And your life should be all about failure too.

Science comes up with an explanation for the data available, and then tests that explanation.

As soon as the explanation fails, everyone goes back to the drawing board and comes up with a new idea, incorporating the data that was collected as a result of testing the first idea.

Over time, science gets more and more right. That is what life is about.

You aren’t going to live a perfect life. You aren’t going to achieve everything you could possibly achieve. But, you can get closer to perfect. You can achieve more than you have so far.

But to do so, you have fail. You have to try something new. And doing so, you will fail. Which is great. Because then you get to learn from your failure, and try again.

To start, try to get three people to tell you no every day, ask random people to do things for you, ask for discounts on retail or food, whatever.

I know it sounds stupid, but the whole idea is to get used to failing and so dampen the fear of it. Then you can see failure for what it is:

A big billboard telling you are going in the right direction but that you just need to adjust your course a tad to take into account what you learned from the failure.

Now What?

You have the tools to recognize fear for what it is and to shine a light on it when it pops up its ugly head—no matter what form it is using.

Then you can then address that fear, knowing that it is largely, if not totally, of your own making. And you can stop the rationalizing that you will inevitably use to avoid doing the scary thing that led to the fear in the first place.

Once you have done that, you will start pushing the envelope of your potential and achieving more than you thought possible.

So look fear in the eyes. Call it out. And, keep moving.

The sky is the limit image via Shutterstock

About Craig Boneau

Craig had an “aha” moment when he realized he wanted to live a life that provides an inspiration to his kids, not a counterexample. He started Forge Tomorrow Today to help others in the same boat. Grab Your Personal Warning System so you can turn your overwhelm into an opportunity to guarantee yourself the joy that comes from being the best version of yourself.

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Nidhi Pandya

Thanks for the post…its what I needed at this moment with my therapist telling me to learn to fail as I have been paralyzed by fear of failure and don’t do even simple things

Craig Boneau

Nidhi, I’m so glad you found the article valuable. Fear of failure can be very debilitating, it certainly has been for me at times. But I’ve found that learning to recognize it so that you can see it for what it is has been essential to overcoming it. I hope the tools in this article are helpful for you. If so, I’d love to hear about it. Please come back and share.

juanita stark

Here is something to pay attention , a great opportunity for work for those who want to use their free time to make money using their computers… I have been doing this since last two years and I am making 40 to 70 dollars per hour … In the last week I have made 12,245 for almost 18 hours sitting ….

?There are no special skills required just basic typing and an internet connection ….

?There are no time constraints … You may do this any time when you are free ….

?Here is what I’ve been doing….

< ->>w­w­w­.­y­o­u­c­a­n­a­l­s­o­c­h­a­n­g­e­y­o­u­r­f­a­t­e­l­i­k­e­o­t­h­e­r­s­a­r­e­.­b­l­o­g­s­p­o­t­.­c­o­m >

~a

JS

Totally me, just different reason. Three years ago I had ‘decided’ to leave my relationship and move out. I had all the right reasons to move, had found the perfect place that was available and at my price…yet! I didn’t make the move. Three years later I still regret that I didn’t take the opportunity that had presented itself. It was the fear of the unknown that had me paralyzed. How would I live by myself and take care of a child, will I be able to manage, what will my family say etc etc.
I’m still not better, but reading your article is encouraging.

AbbaGurl

Good timing! I’m in the midst of a job search and fear reigns supreme. The endless self-judgment – why didn’t I take that job, why didn’t I save more, why did I pick this career – is just another form of avoidance. So many messages about what you “have” to do in order to find a job makes it seem like any deviation is a waste of time. Thanks for the validation and encouragement.

Andreea

Hello, i must say a big wow about posting exactly what fear look alike.. Im also changing jobs, i have found one better than the old one with more money but same hours..and i am so afraid to get out of my comfort zone but i keep telling to my self that better things will come…I found myself wondering after almost 10 years that i can t be productive anymore and i really hate my job but because the job was “sure” i got really comfortable… Although my inner self was not happy and after i took the courage to move forward to the unknown i think i must follow my instincts and move one.. Everyone in my opinion understands that the circle must close sometime and we need to move to the new one… Sorry for the long post but you really pushed my positive thoughts to move forward. thank you 🙂

Craig Boneau

I’m so happy to hear that JS. Thanks for sharing your story. The good thing is that you have recognized what happened and can learn from it going forward. Nice job. So many people don’t take that step and just make the same mistake over and over, so you already ahead of most people.

Craig Boneau

Andreaa, I’m so happy to hear that! It sounds like you are really taking an objective look at your situation, that’s great. I find that people, including me, have such a hard time stepping out of their little world to see things for what they are. Well done. Best of luck with the new job, it sounds like a great opportunity! I’d love to hear how great it turns out.

Craig Boneau

Tana, how is your get a “no” challenge going? Hopefully you have started collecting “nos” all over the place. Thanks for the link to Matthew Cornell’s site, I’d not seen it before, very interesting.

Craig Boneau

Absolutely, and you put your finger right on it. None of it is a waste of time if we use it to inform what we do next. It’s only a waste of time if we ignore the lessons we could learn and just plow ahead as if everything will work itself out with addressing whatever put us in the situation we are in. Essentially, if you use it, it can’t be a waste. Thanks for commenting, I appreciate you sharing the application of the article to your life.

Tana Franko

Well, yesterday I asked if I could get my take-out food faster than I was originally quoted, and I didn’t get a no… I did get my food 15 minutes sooner. I guess I have to try with bigger fish. 🙂 It’s definitely hanging out in the back of my mind…

Craig Boneau

That’s great! Even if you don’t get a “no,” it’s still a pretty good outcome to actually get what you asked for. Well done all around!

Dacia Dyer

Wow, did I need this article! I’ve definitely been stuck in a massive fear cycle for a while now. I think I need to work most on #1 and #5… it’s so true that “Fear lives in starting.” That’s exactly where I get stuck. Thanks for the awesome advice!

Shanker

Hi Craig,

Well stated. I happened to read your article after months. Yet, I’m fortunate to have stumbled on it during movement around in Tiny Buddha. Yes to me, every decision involves moving out of my comfort, a risk of failure, and so by default, it is a fight against our fear.

I’ve been now into something, which everyone around me thinks, to be failure prone. But, I argue that like success is not guaranteed, failure is not guaranteed too. This is what Life has pushed me into. So, I’ve gone aboard. Time alone will tell whether I succeed.

Thanks for sharing great ideas!