Most things you fear in everyday life are not really life threatening at all, but this makes little difference to the prehistoric part of your brain. Whether the fear is triggered when you are asked to stand up and do a presentation, or when speaking to someone you don't know, or doing something genuinely dangerous, it's all the same to your prehistoric mind.
Fear responses are learned over time, by seeing things our parents react to, experiencing scary situations or hearing about them from other people. So to reduce or remove the fear, you need to go about changing the thoughts and feelings associated with the formula:
You need to reduce or remove the emotional tug that fear has on you because that's what holds you back.
When it comes to starting a difficult conversation, or a conversation with people you don't know, how much fear do you feel? It's important to understand how much fear you feel in a given situation. For many people, the fear doesn't have to be totally eliminated in order for them to take action – it just needs to come down to a comfortable level.
For some people, fear is part of the process and they will push on even with a moderate to high level of it. For others, even just a small amount is enough to hold them back. If, in the past, you have achieved something despite an element of fear, you are likely to have a higher fear tolerance. As you've carried on despite fear in the past, your mindset could be that fear isn't a reason to hold back and not take action.
A really good exercise you can do right now is to score the level of fear you currently experience in different situations. Once you've established a baseline, you can measure your progress when you next take action regardless of the fear or undertake exercises to reduce that fear.
We'll be measuring fear using something called a SUD level, which stands for Subjective Unit of Distress (or as I like to call it – Discomfort). The SUD‐level was developed by Joseph Wolpe in 1969.
You measure this yourself; it is your own scale and totally unique to you.
You don't necessarily need to be in the actual fear situation to work out your SUD level in a given scenario. Just sitting down, relaxing and imagining the situation should be enough to give you a good sense of how much fear you would experience.
The way it works is as follows.
When you are in a situation and you experience fear ask yourself:
“How scared am I? How high is my level of fear on a scale of 0–10 where 0 is ‘It's not a problem at all, I could do it in my sleep' and 10 is ‘I know for certain I will die if I do this’.”
These steps will help you measure your fear levels:
1. Remember the last time you were in the situation that you fear.
2. Visualize in your mind what you saw at that time.
3. Imagine you can hear any sounds you heard or things you remember people saying or you said to yourself.
4. Ask yourself – “How much fear did I have in that situation on a scale of 0–10?”
If you are struggling to experience the fear in your imagination, then you just need to put yourself into the situation that causes the fear and take the measurement. For example, if for you it's talking to people you don't know, then try the following exercise:
1. Go somewhere where there are lots of people around.
2. Tell yourself you are going to force yourself to speak to someone.
3. Think of something to say or a question to ask – even “Have you got the time please?”
4. Start to walk in their direction.
5. Speak to them.
Whether you do actually speak to them or not, it doesn't matter. The important thing is to take your SUD reading by asking yourself: “What was that fear level on a scale of 0–10?”
It doesn't matter what your number currently is. It's a reference point for you and you alone. Now, when you start to work through the book, you can take your SUD level at regular intervals and notice your progress.
For some people, knowing that they've got the skillset to start and maintain a conversation and deal with difficult situations is enough for them to begin starting conversations despite their fear levels or SUD reading. For others though, the uncomfortable fear feeling that comes up still needs to be addressed and brought down to a more manageable level on their SUD scale. That's what we are going to be looking at next.
It's important to understand the difference between fear and anxiety.
Fear is generally based on a definite situation that is actually happening right now. For instance, someone says to you “Stand up and tell us all about what you have been up to this last week”. If this is something you'd hate to do, then you'd experience fear in that situation.
Anxiety, on the other hand, is a little different – although it manifests itself with very similar symptoms and feelings to fear. Anxiety is worrying about a situation in the future that may not ever happen. It can be helpful to shift the dialogue from saying you have a fear of something, to saying you are anxious about it instead. For many people this transition can make the situation they're about to go through less daunting.
There are a number of different ways to reduce your SUD score. Different techniques work better for different people.
1. You might find that gaining a skillset in a particular area you fear helps you push through your fear. When you repeat the activity, the fear diminishes further and further and in most cases goes away completely. It may not get to 0, but a 1 or 2 on a SUD scale is low enough for most people to get on with life. A small amount of fear is natural and normal to most people and perfectly healthy.
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