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FEAR AND
REASON
"In civilized life it has at last become possible for large numbers of people to
pass from the cradle to the grave without ever having had a pang of genuine
fear. Many of us need an attack of mental disease to teach us the meaning of the
word." William James.
We have all heard the seemingly discriminating remarks that fear is normal and
abnormal, and that normal fear is to be regarded as a friend, while abnormal
fear should be destroyed as an enemy.
The fact is that no so called normal fear can be named which has not been
clearly absent in some people who have had every cause therefor. If you will run
over human history in your mind, or look about yea in the present life, you will
find here and there persons who, in situations or before objects which ought, as
any fearful soul will insist, to inspire the feeling of at least normal
self-protecting fear, are nevertheless wholly without the feeling. They possess
every feeling and thought demanded except fear. The idea of self-preservation is
as strongly present as with the most abjectly timid or terrified, but fear they
do not know. This fearless awareness of fear suggesting conditions may be due to
several causes. It may result from constitutional make-up, or from long
continued training or habituation, or from religious ecstasy, or from a
perfectly calm sense of spiritual selfhood which is unhurtable, or from the
action of very exalted reason. Whatever the explanation, the fact remains: the
very causes which excite fear in most of us, merely appeal, with such people, if
at all. to the instinct of self-preservation and to reason, the thought-element
of the soul which makes for personal peace and wholeness.
Banish all fear.
It is on such considerations that I have come to hold that all real fear-feeling
should and may be banished from our life, and that what we call "normal fear"
should be substituted in our language by "instinct" or by "reason," the element
of fear being dropped altogether.
"Everyone can testify that the psychical state called fear consists of mental
representations of certain painful results" (James). The mental representations
may be very faint as such, but the idea of hurt to self is surely present. If,
then, it can be profoundly believed that the real self cannot be hurt; if the
reason can be brought to consider vividly and believingly all quieting
considerations; if the self can be held consciously in the assurance that the
White Life surrounds the true self, and is surely within that self, and will
suffer "no evil to come nigh," while all the instincts of self preservation may
be perfectly active, fear itself must be removed "as far as the east is from the
west."
These are the ways, then, in which any occasion for fear may be divided:
As a warning and as a maker of panic. But let us say that the warning should be
understood as given to reason, that fear need not appear at all, and that the
panic is perfectly useless pain. With these discriminations in mind, we may now
go on to a preliminary study of fear.
preliminary study of fear.
Fear is (a) an impulse, (b) a habit, (c) a disease.
Fear, as it exists in man, is a make-believe of sanity, a creature of the
imagination, a state of insanity.
Furthermore, fear is, now of the nerves, now of the mind, now of the moral
consciousness.
The division depends upon the point of view. What is commonly called normal fear
should give place to reason, using the word to cover instinct as well as
thought. From the correct point of view all fear is an evil so long as
entertained.
Whatever its manifestations, wherever its apparent location, fear is a psychic
state, of course, reacting upon the individual in several ways: as, in the
nerves, in mental moods, in a single impulse, in a chronic habit, in a totally
unbalanced condition. The reaction has always a good intention, meaning, in each
case, "Take care! Danger!" You will see that this is so if you will look for a
moment at three comprehensive kinds of fear fear of self, fear for self, fear
for others. Fear of self is indirectly fear for self danger. Fear for others
signifies foresensed or forepictured distress to self because of anticipated
misfortune to others. I often wonder whether, when we fear for others, it is
distress to self or hurt to them that is most emphatically in our thought.
Fear, then, is usually regarded as the soul's danger signal. But the true signal
is instinctive and thoughtful reason. |