To be fearless, just ask yourself ‘what
is it that you are afraid of losing’?
At a
Talk that I delivered recently, a young lady asked me how to deal with
insecurity and fear. She said she often spent long spells of time imagining
stuff that could possibly happen to her – a pink slip, a health setback, a
relationship problem, her son failing in school and such.
“I know
it is stupid to be this way. But how does one get rid of ‘worst-case scenarios’
from your head,” she asked.
I, in
turn, asked her: “What is the worst that can happen to you?”
She thought
for a moment and replied: “Two things – either my son can die or I can die.
Yes, these are my worst-case scenarios.”
My next
question to her was this: “Is there anything that you can do to prevent these
scenarios from ever happening in your Life?”
Again
she thought about it deeply and exclaimed: “No. Seriously, noooooooooooo!”
I asked
her: “So why worry and fear about something that you can’t prevent?”
And that
is really how you get rid of worst-case scenarios in your head. To be sure, the
human mind can beat any Bollywood screenwriter in terms of conjuring up unheard
of, unfathomable, often fantasy-based scenarios. Some of them will necessarily
torment you with worry, anxiety, insecurity and fear. There is a pretty simple
way to deal with these debilitating emotions.
In every
situation that makes me fearful, I ask myself what is the worst that can
happen. And I tell my mind that I am ready and willing for that eventuality.
For instance, in a matter relating to a police complaint filed against me, by
my creditor, it had become evident that if the court disallowed my bail
application, I would be arrested and remanded in custody. I asked my lawyer if
there was a way out. He said that there was none since I did not have money to
furnish a personal surety (a financial bond). This situation was unfolding in
another city. Honestly, I was feeling very restless and fearful. So, I took a
deep breath and called up Vaani. I briefed her of the logical, practical
reality we were faced with. And then I told her, “Listen, I will stay strong
where I am and wherever I have to go. You stay strong too. A way will be born
soon.” Just that acceptance of whatever our reality was at that moment – that I will be arrested, so be it! –
changed the way I felt. I became fearless. In another situation, when I was
diagnosed with a possible life-threatening health condition, I considered the
worst that could happen to me if we didn’t find the money to get a surgery
done. I would die, I reckoned. The whole scenario of my impending death
unfolded in my mind’s eye and I actually started smiling. Of course, all of us
will die, I remember thinking. “And this was perhaps my time to die,” I had concluded.
That thought actually made me feel
lighter – and totally fearless. From then on, whenever I am faced with any
no-go situation – and I have to deal with several of them each week – I remind
myself that “I was once even prepared to die”. Whenever I do this, my fear always
slinks away.
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