Leverage Your Fear to Fuel Your Growth

Episode 436 | Host: Emilie Aries | Guest: Farnoosh Torabi

Reframe your relationship with fear.

Content warning: this podcast episode includes mentions of pregnancy loss.

Fear. We all experience it—it’s an emotion we’re innately wired for—which makes it all the more shocking that we’re not taught how to deal with it productively growing up. Instead, we often learn to pack it down, ignore it, and fight against it. We’re taught to be fearless instead. Since that’s all but impossible, we start our professional lives with a foundational misconception about fear—and that’s no way to flourish!

Farnoosh Torabi, a personal finance advisor, journalist, and author, explored the role of fear and our pursuit of success in her latest book, A Healthy State of Panic. I spoke with her about the inspiration and intricacies of the book in the latest episode of the Bossed Up podcast. We explored how to identify and engage with our fear and use that relationship to bolster our aspirations and pursuit of success.

Explore your fears

Society teaches us to run from our fear, to fight or ignore it. But what if we questioned it instead? Farnoosh isn’t talking about getting confrontational; rather, she’s suggesting we observe and ask questions like, “Where did you come from?” The answer to this question can make a big difference.

Upon closer inspection, you might realize you’ve tuned in to a fear your mother felt 30 years ago that’s not really relevant for you today. Or, you might discover this particular fear was taught to you in school as you grew up, but your own lived experience disproves its legitimacy. Fears like these could be tamed by recognizing that they don’t belong to you.

If the fear is true to your experience of the world, Farnoosh says it’s time to reframe. Instead of denying our fears, ask them, “What are you trying to get me to protect?”

Fear tends to rear up when our livelihood is at stake in the form of a career or relationship change, for instance. It’s good sense to think long and hard about the risk you’re taking. How might you lay out clearer steps, stronger contingencies, a more solid strategy that will reassure your protective instincts that you’re recognizing this risk and protecting that livelihood? Consider how you might come out of this fear tête-à-tête with an iron-clad game plan for the next steps.

The power of naming your fear

A few years ago, Marc Brackett and I talked about emotional intelligence and the practice of labeling our feelings to take away their power. This tactic works for fear, too. Knowing what flavor of fear you’re feeling, as Farnoosh puts it, and categorizing it puts the power back in your hands. Now that you know this is a fear of rejection, a fear of loneliness, a fear of failure, you can wrap your head around what it’s trying to tell you and start to take action, which is really what your fear is trying to get you to do in the first place.

Transforming our fear of failure

High achievers often have pretty chronic relationships with a fear of failure. Aiming sky high is amazing and terrifying at the same time, but Farnoosh suggests that the trick to mitigating that terror could be to remove the possibility of failure altogether.

What if your scenario for each future endeavor had success baked in? Because let’s face it, even if we don’t hit our end goal, we still come away from each and every attempt with fresh proof that we can give it our all, we can face challenges, and new lessons learned. When you put it that way, doesn’t it sound a lot like you’ve succeeded, wherever on the path you wind up?

Related Links from today’s episode:

Farnoosh Torabi on Instagram

Farnoosh’s website

A Healthy State of Panic

The So Money podcast

Bossed Up episode 323 with Marc Brackett

Bossed Up Courage Community

Bossed Up LinkedIn Group

FACE YOUR FEAR AND LEVEL UP YOUR CAREER:

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