Overcoming Anxiety and Fear
Overcoming Anxiety and Fear
Overcoming Anxiety and Fear
I
have anxiety panic attacks at least one
time per day.
How can I calm down? I mean if I think
on what's happening the panic becomes
worse.
Help.
This is one that I answer a lot in various
forms,
but it is especially good to answer these
questions because this is a
This is a real life important question. It's
not like what would happen if all
everyone became buddhist and
so on and so on.
Because it's actually pertinent today. It's
actually an important question. It's not
such an important question to know what
would happen if x
Not to really
not to poke fun too much, but
this is an important question no because
you have anxiety and that's causing real
problems in your life.
So you have to ask yourself is the anxiety
really a problem? Is the problem really
the anxiety?
Because if it is then clearly looking at it
is not the answer right because when
you look at it, it gets stronger,
it becomes clearer. You get even more
focused on the anxiety.
But let's step back a second and really
ask ourselves. What happens when
you're anxious? What does it do?
Probably it
tenses up the stomach, tenses up the
head, tenses up the shoulders and makes
you feel really bad and
prevents you from
interacting with other people, from
carrying out your life it might even lead
you to do something desperate -
hurt yourself, hurt other people, it'll
cause you to
it'll prevent you from living an ordinary
life.
But what is actually going on there?
When you have the anxiety,
what is it that is
preventing you from,
what is it that is actually preventing you
from carrying out your life in an ordinary
manner.
When you look - what I'm trying to say
here in bit of an awkward way is that
when you look at the anxiety,
you'll see that actually
It really isn't objectively a very big
problem at all
Anxiety is a state of mind that causes
physical reactions
Tensing and so on but it really stops
there a simple anxiety and panic attack
stops there. It has effects in the mind it
has effects in the body, but
Unless we react to it in a negative way
it doesn't have
a
massive
impact or a significant impact on our
lives. It doesn't have to have a significant
impact on our lives in any way.
I used to have very strong panic attacks
when I had to give a talk when I had to
get up on stage or
anything like that
and
this was an issue as a
Buddhist monk because you know people
think you're in robes and well, you must
know something so they want you to give
a talk
And so you get up on stage and
sometimes in front of hundreds or I don't
know hundreds of people anyway
and
it can create a real panic attack that is a
clear example of how people who don't
have a strong tendency to panic can
really panic
and what I found through the meditation
was
The heart the hardest part of it was that
noting didn't help meditation didn't help
Because I would acknowledge and I
would say to myself
"afraid, afraid" or "feeling, feeling" then
the tension in the stomach and so on and
it wouldn't go away
Sometimes it would get even worse
But what I found
was that by
doing it anyway by noting anyway
regardless of whether it was going away
by trying and trying and trying and really
putting my heart into the noting and
Every moment to be aware of what's
going on
that the panic, the
panic attack in general didn't get in my
way, surprisingly enough, didn't get in my
way
in giving the talk and sometimes I
actually gave a better talk than when I
was relaxed.
I've seen motivational speakers because
when I was young I would go to all these
these motivation or these leadership
conferences
and they'd have motivational speakers. I
saw one
motivational speaker twice, and it's
something I'll always remember
the first time he gave the
speech, I didn't know him or I wasn't
in close contact with him, but it was a
big deal. He'd never been to this
leadership conference before this was
his first time being invited
And so it seemed like he took it very
seriously, and it was a brilliant talk.
It was really something that inspired us
all.
The second time he came back to give a
talk again, and I was at that point
it was my second time or third time or
whatever and I was one of the
organizers and so I was talking with him,
and I was really impressed by this guy,
so I was sitting with him and
he was so it seemed so high on his last
appearance
that he got so he got overconfident
he was sitting there telling me about how
you just get up there and talk you know
and
you know it doesn't matter what you say
it always comes out right if you just let
yourself talk and so on.
And he got up and he bombed
totally he really fell flat because he was
expecting people to just
he was expecting a positive reaction, and
so he wasn't trying.
He wasn't putting any effort into it
He wasn't being mindful you might say of
course he didn't have a great knowledge
of mindfulness.
When you're worried
When you have stress, it's often easier to
be mindful than when you're happy, right
This is why people come to Buddhism
when they're suffering because they
really feel like they need an answer.
and so
This surprising thing led me to or helped
me to understand
which what I've come to understand
through in general through the
meditation practice is that the biggest
problem is not the
experiences even be they
inherently negative experiences, it's our
tendency to react to them
React negatively to a negative
experience.
The truth of it is
When you focus on the anxiety when or
not just focus on it when you recognize
the anxiety as anxiety
the anxiety itself disappears.
The anxious mind state is replaced by a
mindful mind state.
What doesn't disappear and what fools
you into thinking that you're still anxious
is the physical results of it,
the physical manifestations of it,
because
they are
They are not directly connected to
one state of mind. It's like
you've already set the ball rolling and
now you're feeling the effects of it; now
you're feeling
the effects of the anxiety in the stomach,
in the head, in the shoulders, feeling all
tense and
that's what doesn't go away.
The problem is we don't see that and we
lose our confidence in the meditation
practice when we give it up
and we feel anxious again. We get
worried about it.
We say it's not going away, and then we
get anxious again.
It's really.. this isn't the.. I don't have an
answer. I don't know what to do
I still don't have a solution, and so it
makes us anxious again the anxiety
comes up again
and we try to be mindful again, and we
find that
yes, the the effects of it are still there
and so we think the anxiety is still there
and so on and so on.
If we are
Obs.. what is the word observant,
we will be able to notice the difference,
and you should try to notice the
difference
Often that you need this you need a
teacher to point it out to you that the
physical and mental are two different
things.
It's the first stage of knowledge that a
person comes to.
The difference between the physical and
the mental and the separation between
them two and in fact, that's what you're
realizing
That's what this is showing to you.
It's showing you the difference between
the physical and mental because when
you say oh
"anxious, anxious" or "worried, worried"
the worry is already gone at that moment
you're not worried,
you're focused and mindful and clearly
aware.
The physical
is not affected by that. The physical will
continue to.. the physical is
something
separate from this.
It is something that has already been
affected by the past anxiety.
What you should do at that point
when you still feel the
effects of the anxiousness is you should
see them as physical and note them as
well the feeling in
the stomach "feeling, feeling" "tense,
tense" if you react to it,
disliking it, you should focus on this new
mind state that has arisen
"disliking, disliking", but this is what's
going on.
An anxiety attack is not just
anxiousness. You know. There's this
entity that is there
continuously
It's a whole bunch of things going on for
a moment a moment. Anxious -
physical feeling - disliking the physical
feeling - anxious again, and so on and so
on and so many different things involved
in there.
There can be ego, the attachment to it.
I'm anxious..
there can be
desire the desire to be confident and to
impress other people and so on
But certainly the meditation is working.
The meditation is helping you to see that
these things are not under your control
the
neither the physical nor the mental is
subject to your control.
The more you cling to it, the more you
try to fix it or try to
avoid it and try to change it try to make
things better, the more suffering, stress
and
disappointment you'll create for yourself
the bigger the problem will become so
when the anxiety comes, it is correct to
say to yourself "anxious, anxious" to
focus on it, to be mindful of it to let
yourself quote-unquote "be anxious"
because the anxiety is
not what's the problem the problem is
your reaction to
generally physical states that are caused
by the anxiety.
Anxiety is just a moment.
It's something that occurs in the
moment, and then it's gone.
At the moment when you're mindful
it's already gone.
All that's left is the physical experiences
which should be noted as well.
And if you can be thorough with this and
note everything note the anxiety when
it's there or not the physical
sensations, note the disliking going back
and forth and be thorough and
complete in your noting,
you'll begin to get the hang of it, and you
will realize that it doesn't matter what
arises.
Nothing has the power to hurt you until
you react to it.
Not even negative mind states can hurt
you until you react
to them, so
Just be a little more patient with it
And you'll see for yourself all the things
that I'm explaining to you.
If you're a little more patient with the
anxiety, you know,
noting it even though the anxiety doesn't
seem to go away
And noting moreover the physical
sensations, the disliking of the anxiety
and so on and so on every
physical and mental experience that
arises from moment to moment
You will see and you'll be able to break
these things apart
and you'll cease to be disturbed by them
because you'll see that they don't have
any power over you and
that it doesn't really matter what occurs
Doesn't matter whether you get afraid, it
doesn't matter whether you're anxious. It
doesn't even matter whether it
inhibits your ability to perform in life.
It doesn't matter if people think you're a
fool and useless and
incompetent, it doesn't really matter. It
doesn't matter if you're thrown out on the
street doesn't matter if you die
When you come to this realization, this is
what really
overcomes anxiety. I mean I guess I had
real anxiety problems even as a monk
and it's something that
through practice really
is really easy to solve actually.
I think anxiety and fear are really easy
ones to solve and it may not be
eradicated
quickly, but the solution comes fairly
quickly when you realize that it doesn't
really matter.
Yeah, you can be anxious yeah, you can
be afraid
and these are the of course acceptance
which is the opposite of anxiety you
know and
that destroys them I think
Anybody wanna chime in there?
Marion, you have something to add?
Um I was just ganna say I thought how
you answered on this problem
And and with the emphasis on patience
and realizing that you know all these
petty little
feelings that we have are just, you know,
not that important.
I was thinking of you when I said getting
thrown out on the street.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
++++
Troubled by Fear? Just Change
Your Channel! – Sadhguru
Questioner: Many times in my daily life
fear stops me from doing small things
and bigger things
fear from failure,
fear from
maybe from rejection sometimes.
How to overcome this fear?
Sadhguru: You cannot overcome
something which does not exist.
Right now, are you in fear?
Right now,
that I may say something damaging?
Is that the fear? (Laughs)
Every moment of your life, you are in
fear?
No.
So, when you are not in fear,
just stay like that
because to create fear,
you have to use excessive imagination.
To not be in fear, you don’t have to do
anything.
Fear is happening because of excessive
imagination
things that have not happened, you are
creating.
What may happen in your mind
happens in thousand different formats
and most probably it never happens.
The things that you have feared
Take hundred things that you have
feared.
Probably ninety nine of them never
happened, isn’t it?
Yes?
So, your fear is always about that which
does not exist.
You cannot fight or you cannot overcome
that which does not exist.
We can overcome something which…
that exists.
You cannot overcome that which does
not exist.
We just have to give up that effort.
Enjoy the fear.
After all, it’s your making.
You like horror movies?
Yes.
I mean, you are saying no
but you are producing them.
Just they are not making money, that’s
all.
Fear means you’re producing horror
movies in your mind.
Nobody else is willing to watch.
That’s bad for the producer,
but you are producing them.
So, you produce something else
produce a comedy, a love story,
suspense thriller
try and see today.
Just sit down, produce a love story,
a suspense thriller,
a comedy -
five five minutes movies you make in
your mind,
really.
Start using your mind differently.
It’s just gotten into your pattern.
It’s just gotten into your pattern of
just creating horror movies all the time.
You have watched enough horror movies,
they’re boring.
Create something else.
Even… It’s not that if you produce these
movies,
those things will happen in your life.
Still they may not happen.
At least you enjoy the movie. (Laughs)
In reality, it may not happen,
so what?
At least you enjoy what’s happening in
your mind
if you cannot enjoy what’s happening in
the world, isn’t it?
That much privilege every human being
deserves. Isn’t it so?
Even if the world is not kind to him,
at least his own mind should be kind to
him
so produce some nice movies. (Laughs)
+++++++++++++++++++++++
Don’t Let Fear of Suffering Limit Your
Possibility – Sadhguru
Sadhguru: If you try to control the variety
of situations that may pop up in your
face tomorrow morning,
all that’ll happen is you will become a
very limited life.
You would step out into the world and do
whatever that needs to be done only if
you have an assurance –
no matter what you walk into, you will
not lose yourself.
You will walk full stride, otherwise you’ll
only be a half a step.
Most human beings are half steps
because the fear of suffering,
“If this happens, what’ll happen to me?
That happens, what’ll happen to me?”
If you are well-managed within yourself –
you know how to manage your thought,
you know how to manage your emotion,
you know how to manage your body, your
chemistry, your energy,
if you know how to manage all this –
what does it matter if you walk into hell,
I’m asking?
If you are well-managed, if you are a
heaven within you, what does it matter
where you go?
Hell also will be an interesting place to
go.
But if you are ill-managed,
then you want to be in a nice place all
the time, you will not step out into
anything.
I’m not saying this is wrong.
This is against nature because in nature,
every life is aspiring to be as much as it
can be, isn’t it?
Every life is naturally aspiring – this is
not a philosophy, this is not an ideology
that you must do this or that.
It is natural and intrinsic for every life
that it will do as much as it can.
From an earthworm…
From a worm to an insect to a bird to an
animal to a tree, every one of them are
trying to be full-fledged life.
If you go against this
simply because of the fear of suffering,
then all possibilities of exploring the
nature of being human,
the tremendous immensity of being
human is just lost upon humanity.
Today you will see this everywhere, when
people say,
“I am only human”, they are talking about
the limitations of being human,
they are not talking about the
possibilities of being human, isn’t it?
When… If we are the most intelligent
species on the planet,
if we are the most capable species on
the planet,
should we be talking about our
possibilities or should we be talking
about our limitations?
Whenever anybody writes or says, “Oh,
we are human”,
they are always referring to their
limitations, never to the possibilities of
being human.
This is because they… the most
fundamental things have not been taught
in our education systems –
how to handle your thought and your
emotion. Tch,
your psychological drama has gone out
of control (Laughs).
It’s a badly directed drama, believe me
(Laughs).
If it was a well-directed drama, you
would take it to the conclusion that you
want, isn’t it?
Because it’s a badly directed drama, just
about anybody can take charge of it.
Who is the director of your psychological
drama?
Just about anybody, isn’t it?
Anybody can make it into a tragedy
(Laughs).
The reason why people have not even
learnt to manage their thought and
emotion…
By the time you’re ten, you should have
learnt it.
At sixty, people still don’t know how to
manage their thought and emotion.
They’re standing up like ghosts in their
life.
They don’t need anybody’s help, they can
go on endlessly creating suffering for
themselves.
Now, suppose you did not know how…
You have normal hands and you do not
know how to use it, what would you call
yourself?
No, you tell yourself, don’t tell me, it’s
okay (Few laugh).
Whatever you think…
If you have a normal process of mental
faculty and you do not know how to use
it,
it means the same thing.
Yes or no?
Participants: Yes
Sadhguru: Does it mean the same thing
or no?
Tch, you don’t have a normal hand, then
you can’t use it, that’s different, we will
look at you compassionately.
But you have a normal hand and you
don’t know how to use it –
whatever word you used to call yourself,
don’t tell me,
but the same thing goes if you don’t
know how to use your thought and
emotion
towards your well-being, isn’t it?
Because ill-managed,
because the fundamentals of life are not
grasped.
“What is the nature of my existence?” if
you don’t know this, how do you manage
it?
Only if you grasp the nature of
something, then you learn to manage it,
isn’t it?
You don’t even see what it is, how to
manage it?
There is no way to manage it.
So the first and foremost thing that’s
why is called realization.
You must understand this (Laughs).
In this country, in this culture,
we never referred to any kind of spiritual
realization as an attainment; we’ve only
said it is a realization.
Realization means...
you simply saw what is already there.
You did not invent anything.
You did not climb the top of a mountain.
You’re beginning to see everything just
the way it is.
But that has become such a rarity
(Laughs)
that it is being hugely valued.
Someone was asking me three days ago I
was in Kerala
“Sadhguru, you seem to know
everything.”
I said, “See, there is only one thing I
know.
I know this one thing (Referring to
oneself) from its origin to its ultimate”
(Applause).
Hey, why? I said only one thing and what
are you clapping your hands for
(Laughter)?
I know only this one thing (Referring to
oneself).
But because the nature of human
experience is such,
you know everything only through this
one (Referring to oneself), isn’t it?
++++++++++++++++++
Sogyal Rinpoche ~ Overcoming Fear
and Anxiety
Buddha said, “All fear and anxiety come
from a mind that is untamed.”
And he further said, “There’s nothing to
fear except your untamed mind.”
Whenever we have anxiety about things,
or worry, it may be about things, but they
primarily
manifest because our mind is untamed,
not in a good state.
So if you transform instead of trying to
solve the cause of your worry
and anxiety, which you might not be able
to do because there are a lot of things,
but instead if you knew how to transform
the mind, then what happens?
That the anxiety and fear is transformed.
And thereby, even once your fear and
anxiety is transformed, then you can
tackle problems,
difficulties, with more composure, more
wisdom, more insight.
His Holiness Dalai Lama often quotes,
and this is his, this is a kind of a maxim
he goes by.
It was said by a great master, he said, “If
you can do something to solve a problem,
then there is no need to worry about it.
But if you cannot do anything to solve a
problem, it doesn’t help to worry about it
either.”
In both cases, worry is extra,
unnecessary worry.
In Tibetan we call it—the worry is sem
né, mind sickness.
Instead of worry, instead of worry, is
really if you try to do what you can.
If you can do something to solve a
problem, then there is...
Where as if we cannot do something,
then it doesn’t help to worry about it
either.
But to be able to do that, if you are able
to transform your mind, then as you have
less fear and anxiety, because if you are
too nervous, too anxious about it, then
you
won’t be able to do anything.
Anything, kind of—you know, you are
always worried.
Once you are able to transform your
mind, then you can tackle—do whatever
is necessary to do.
Is that clear?
In fact, the poet John Milton said in his
Paradise Lost,
he said, “Mind is
its own place and in itself can make a
heaven of hell and hell of heaven.”
Shakespeare said also, he said, “There is
nothing either good or bad, but thinking
makes it so."
How you interpret.
Main thing is about our perception,
transforming our perception.
Perception.
Do you understand?
The great master Padmasambhava, or
Guru Rinpoche, 'Precious master' as
Tibetans call him affectionately,
who brought the teaching of Buddha to
Tibet and who is the author of
The Tibetan Book of the Dead and the
teaching on the bardos which are
teaching on life and death.
The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying, in
the line of Padmasambhava's teachings.
He said, the main thing for this life, what
to do in this life, to keep it very simple,
main thing in this life is to work with the
mind, to purify our perception and realise
the essence of mind, nature of mind and
compassionate mind.
Because as Dalai Lama, I think once
quoted in Zürich, in year 2005, he was
quoting the
founder of the cognitive therapy, who
said that, you see, when you for example
like, have anger,
or one strong negative emotion, often
that really stains 90% of your perception.
Is stained by anger; only 10% you see
reality.
Basically 90% projection and 10% reality.
Do you understand?
So seeing is not believing.
What you are seeing is only your
projection.
That is why we need to purify our mind.
In the highest Buddhist philosophy—or in
the practice—is a principle of what is
called shunyata.
Great emptiness.
The emptiness is not nothing-ness.
But rather what does emptiness mean?
Empty of concepts, empty of the
projection.
So that you begin to see things more, you
see more reality.
Do you understand?
So through practice of meditation, nature
of mind, mind is more purified of its
projection.
You begin the see things clearly.
And as you see more clearly, there is
less afflictive emotions, because
sometimes emotions
are very entangled, we are so much
caught up in the emotions and it makes
us very much suffer.
Once you become more clear, once you
become more in control, more
understand our emotions,
emotions can still arise, but we are no
longer swayed by them.
We no longer are subject to that.
Rather we can understand emotions with
more compassion.
And transform it and realise it's
workable, it’s not impossible.
Mind is very workable, really and then
mind can be very pliable.
If you know, if you train, if you work with,
mind can be very pliable.
Pliable means it’s like—it’s really flexible,
not hard, not rigid but pliable like a
dough,
dough, like a—if you make with flour, a
dough, mind becomes very pliable.
Pliable.
But to all this the key lies in
understanding the essence of mind,
coming to actually to arrive
at more the ground of mind.
I mean you might say, “How can we just
arrive like that?”
By coming to the ground of mind.
Way of—you can say—either you can say
arriving at the ground of mind, or more
transcending the mind,
like going through the clouds and then
going beyond the clouds and discovering
the sky-like.
You can say either grounding in a,
settling in a natural great peace,
or transcending the mind.
When you transcend the mind, go beyond
the thoughts and emotions, then you
become like a, really,
you find the ground.
You find the ground.
And in that, when you find the ground,
then you begin to realize, you see,
very much a sense of being.
You discover, you connect with your
fundamental being.
And you really connect with yourself in a
deep way, beyond the ego self, your true
self
and there you discover a tremendous
goodness.
Goodness, there is tremendous love,
there is tremendous compassion.
This infinite wisdom, infinite
compassion, which is the nature.
Like for example, when the sky is free of
clouds, then you reveal the sky-like
nature
of your mind.
And then from there the great sun of our
true nature shines forth.
Or you can say: Of our buddha nature
shines forth like the sun has what—
tremendous light, light is the wisdom;
the warmth is the love and compassion.
Do you understand?
Very much like that, very much within
ourselves.
Also this French philosopher Pascal once
said,
he said: “All of men’s difficulties,”
I mean, in those days people said always
men's difficulties, men—
everything is man, mankind... Now of
course it's more—mankind is not so,
politically not correct.
It's humanity.
So, all of men's, that means also
woman’s difficulties, this I think is very
profound.
All of men's, that means also woman’s
difficulties, are caused by his,”—or her
—“inability
to sit quietly in a room by himself.”
We don’t know how to just simply be.
In fact, I found that very profound.
Because the trouble is, because of the
inability to sit quietly in a room by
himself.
We don’t know how to be with ourselves.
We are not in touch with ourselves.
We don’t know how to be.
Hence, we have lost the contentment
and the peace.
If you really know—if you really are able
to sit quietly in a room, by yourself and
really, specially connect with your true
nature, keep the company, is the most
wonderful.
Is like when you really rest in meditation,
which is—what is meditation?—is a
process
of coming to know one’s mind.
So, through meditation, what is revealed
in us is the ground of your true nature—
the sky-like nature of mind.
When you come into touch with that,
there’s an incredible release, incredible
spaciousness
and freedom.
You connect with yourself.
I think the greatest discovery.
The Dalai Lama said, “We travelled
millions of millions of billions of miles to
travel
to the stars, but we have not travelled
here,” you know?—this.
When you really are able to discover that
and be in the company of your true
nature,
where you connect with yourself and
then also, you connect with others, one
becomes a friend
with yourself, all the negativity is
defused.
It’s like the greatest disarmament, inner
disarmament.
And also charity truly beginning at home,
you know.
And when you become that, then from
out of that you contact with your
fundamental goodness,
then kindness, good-heart, kindness,
compassion, love, wisdom emanate.
And then really that’s the source of
happiness.
That’s the way to be happy.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
LR
Fear is a very tricky thing. Sometimes we put up a pretense of virtue, but really we’re
afraid of being bad. Are our good deeds true virtue or just fear? Fear also stops us from
speaking up when we know we should. Fear is often what causes people to leave the path
of dharma. When things start to go deep, beyond self-improvement, they encounter fear
and say, “This path is not for me.”
The essential cause of our suffering and anxiety is ignorance of the nature of reality, and
craving and clinging to something illusory. That is referred to as ego, and the gasoline in
the vehicle of ego is fear. Ego thrives on fear, so unless we figure out the problem of fear,
we will never understand or embody any sense of egolessness or selflessness.
We have our conscious day-to-day fears—of a close call, an accident, a bad health
diagnosis. But then there is an undercurrent of fear, which is very relevant to
practitioners. This undercurrent of fear lurks behind a lot of our habits. It is why it is so
hard to just sit still or stand still or stand in line—not doing anything in particular—
without feeling nervous and fidgety. We have a fear of being still.
Why do we spin out so many thoughts all the time? We sit and try to quiet the mind but it
just rumbles on and on, churning out masses of thought, small and large and pink and
yellow and bland and slimy. Why? It’s because of this undercurrent of fear. It’s as though
we have to keep things moving. We have to keep ourselves distracted at some
fundamental level. We have to keep our momentum going, because it’s pretty scary to
think of it stopping. Once we have separation and duality, we have to maintain the
momentum. The problem with ego and duality is that at some level we know it’s a sham,
but we have to keep at it. So part of the undercurrent of fear is the fear of being found
out, of being exposed as a big fat phony who is creating a solid illusion out of thin air.
Fear has two extremes. At one extreme, we freeze. We are petrified, literally, like a rock.
At the other extreme, we panic. We run around like maniacs and our mind goes into
hyperdrive. Freeze or panic. Freeze or panic. How do we find the path through those
extremes?
There are many stages in the practitioner’s journey of working with fear, but it is very
important to know where it begins, so we can get off on the right foot. The starting point
is called the narrow path, where you look straightforwardly at your own experience. You
examine fear and dissect it into its components. Where does it arise? What is the
sensation when you feel afraid? What kind of thoughts race through your mind when you
are in a state of fear? What’s your particular pattern? Do you panic? Do you freeze? Do
you get really busy and try to fix everything? Do you get angry? At this stage in the path,
you try to understand your experience, try to break it down.
To do this, it helps to see things as they arise—before they become full-blown and you
are caught in their sway, at which point you can’t do much about them. In meditation
practice you slow things down, and that allows you to see the subtle arisings. By slowing
things down, you can interrupt the tossing of the match into the pile of leaves. You can
say, “I don’t need to go there. I see what’s coming.” You catch things when they’re
manageable. Understanding, examining, knowing, slowing down—those are the first
steps in working with fear, the beginning of the path to fearlessness.
The Cave of the Blue Dragon
By John Daido Loori, Roshi
There’s a koan I’m particularly fond of called “The National Teacher’s Stone Lion.” The
national teacher and the emperor of China were entering the palace grounds when the
national teacher pointed to a stone lion and said, “Your majesty, would you please say a
word of Zen, something profound, about this lion?” And the emperor said, “I can’t say
anything. Would you please say something?” And the national teacher said, “It’s my
fault.”
What the national teacher was doing was taking responsibility for what Zorba the Greek
called “the full catastrophe.” Our tendency, by contrast, is to make ourselves the victim,
which means there is nothing we can do. I think, “He made me angry. It’s his fault. There
is nothing I can do.” But when I realize that only I can make myself angry, then I’ve
empowered myself to do something about my anger. The same goes for fear.
Confined in a cage up against the wall, pressed against the barriers, if you linger in
thought holding back your potential, you will remain mired in fear and frozen in inaction.
If, on the other hand, you advance fearlessly and without hesitation, you manifest your
power as a competent adept of the way, passing through entanglements and barriers
without hindrance to time and season. A great peace is attained. How do you advance
fearlessly and without hesitation?
Fear arises the moment you ask yourself, what is this all about? Inevitably, it has nothing
to do with right now. It has to do with the future, but the future doesn’t exist. It hasn’t
happened yet. The past doesn’t exist. It has already happened. The only thing you’ve got
is what’s right here, right now. And coming home to the moment makes all the difference
in the world in how you deal with fear.
There are all kinds of fearlessness. Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche used to talk about “idiot
compassion.” Well, there’s idiot fearlessness too, which is just being dull-witted. If you
remain calm when everyone else panics, perhaps you don’t understand the problem.
When we talk about “advancing fearlessly,” it’s not that.
There’s also the fearlessness that comes out of anger, out of converting your fear into
anger in the face of danger, but that’s not a lasting solution. There’s the fearlessness of
young people, the kind of people the military likes to send off to war. When you’re
seventeen or eighteen, you can feel invulnerable, but false invulnerability is not a wise
form of fearlessness. Fearlessness is empowered by fear. You can’t develop fearlessness
—real compassionate, generous fearlessness—without fear. Fearlessness is born of fear.
“…if you linger in thought holding back your potential, you will remain mired in fear and
frozen in inaction.”
That’s where we freeze in the presence of fear. We may have all the potential of a lion, a
Buddha, but the moment we start analyzing and projecting, we give rise not to freedom
but to more things to analyze. We come up with all kinds of rationalizations for our fear,
but somehow they don’t seem to help. We define it, categorize it, analyze it, judge it,
understand it, but still fear persists.
“If, on the other hand, you advance fearlessly without hesitation, you manifest your
power as a competent adept of the way.”
This power comes directly out of meditation. In zazen, each time you acknowledge a
thought, let it go, and come back to the moment, you build joriki, the power of
concentration. The more you sit, the deeper you sit, the more joriki you build, and the
closer you come to the falling away of body and mind. Meditation means going to where
you already are, what you already have. It’s a direct pointing to the human mind,
constantly pointing back to ourselves.
“…passing through entanglements and barriers without hindrance to time and season. A
great peace is attained.”
This is what we call the endless spring, the endless spring of enlightenment. Always
present and perfect, whether we realize it or not.
For this, I will refer to the koan’s capping verse, its poetic expression:
The cave of the blue dragon is where we store all of our stuff—our psychological bilge,
so to speak—and it’s very difficult to go there. It takes a certain degree of fearlessness to
do that. The process of zazen engages that. It engages the fear, in order to empower
fearlessness. When stuff comes up, we don’t use zazen as another vehicle for suppression.
When something keeps coming up in meditation, that’s a signal that you need to deal with
it. You need to process it. You need to process it thoroughly and fearlessly, to feel it and
experience it, then let it go and come back to the moment.
Fear the Right Thing
By Robert Thurman
We all think that fear is awful and painful, yet the Buddhists—the master psychologists
for thousands of years—don’t include fear in the long list of mental afflictions contained
in the Abhidharma, the core teachings on Buddhist psychology. Anger is mentioned.
Impatience is mentioned. Many other familiar afflictions are mentioned. But not fear. I’ve
always thought that was curious, but if we consider it closely, we’ll see a way in which it
makes sense.
Being free of fear is certainly praised in the buddhadharma. One of the three major types
of giving is giving someone protection from fear. It’s the essence of the abhaya, the no-
fear mudra. This is the famous gesture of the Buddha where he holds up his hand, palm
out. Indeed, when you become a buddha, you become fearless.
Under normal circumstances fear is not a problem, which is why it’s not listed among the
afflictions. Fear is a healthy thing, in general. It is awareness of danger. Fear is protective;
it’s what helps us to avoid wandering into a hungry lion’s den.
So fear is helpful in that everyday sense. It is also helpful in the Buddhist sense, in the
form of fear of suffering, embodied in the first noble truth. The truth of suffering is not a
doomsday prediction. It is not expressing an inevitable destiny. On the contrary, it alerts
us to the fact that we are not being aware of what we really are. We are deluded about
suffering. We ought to be aware of our suffering. We should be afraid of suffering, in fact.
Otherwise, why would we have any reason to do anything about it?
Fear will motivate us to try to understand the world and ourselves, and when we do, we
will come to appreciate the second noble truth: that suffering is caused by a habit of
constructing an absolute self. We go through life being absolute, as if no one else matters,
but we can look at that habit and come to learn that it doesn’t work. We can develop deep
concentration, deep meditation about that and ultimately free ourselves from that gut
feeling of being “the real me,” opposed to everything and everyone else. If we don’t
overcome this sense of self-absoluteness, we will descend into the lower realms of being.
That is something it is reasonable to fear.
The third noble truth is nirvana—the fact that it is possible to become permanently free of
suffering and yet not dead. Many people in America think they’re going to be
permanently free of suffering just by dying, but the third noble truth tells us that it is
possible to be free of suffering and also be alive. That is ultimate fearlessness. And the
Buddha offered us a means to realize this in the form of the fourth noble truth, which
describes an educational process involving study, concentration, meditation, and
changing your lifestyle.
If you follow this path, you can reach a stage where you’re connected to your own
nobleness and the nobleness of others. You realize there is no absolute self, and therefore
the self is a flexible, relational thing, like an aikido master of reality. You understand
yourself as interwoven with the universe. You have diminished your sense of isolation
and alienation from others, your disconnectedness from the world. You have increased
and intensified your sense of connection to the world. You do not fear that connectedness.
It is said that out of ignorance we fear what we should not fear, and we are not afraid of
what we should be afraid of. Normally we fear the connectedness, but it is in fact the
disconnectedness that we ought to be afraid of. Starting out with the right kind of fear is
the way to fearlessness.
It took me many years to warm up to that story. I thought it inconceivable that I could
undergo such a thing without batting an eye. If they were doing startle tests when I was
young, I’m pretty sure I would have failed miserably. Another reason I didn’t like the
story was that it seemed so offhanded about life. I thought the story meant that it was all
the same to the Zen master whether he lived or died. And it’s not all the same to me. I’d
much rather live.
I don’t actually know whether the story is meant to imply that the Zen master had so
much insight into the absolute that he really didn’t discriminate between living or dying,
but I don’t think that matters so much. The point, as I understand it now, is that he
understood there was nothing at all for him to do. In the face of being killed, you have
two possibilities. You can fight with the moment, either physically or mentally, and create
more turmoil in your mind. Or you can say, this is simply what’s happening. That’s what
happens where something as final as death is in sight. The mind gives up its usual hope
for another reality, and when it gives up that hope, the mind relaxes. It doesn’t have to
look for something else to do. So even though it is the end, it’s without suffering.
It was very important for me to learn the difference between suffering and pain. Suffering
is the extra turmoil in the mind over and above the pain of body and mind. The absence
of that tension is the absence of suffering. The Zen master could let go of that tension.
Even those of us who haven’t been doing decades of practice can let go of that tension
when we are faced with the inevitable. This is not theoretical. I have seen this with
friends of mine who are dying of cancer.
The gesture of fearlessness is a simple gesture of accepting whatever there is. It’s not the
“whatever” of adolescence, which combines “couldn’t care less” with a little bit of
aggression. This “whatever” is the whatever of truth. Things happen because other things
have happened. Karma is true. This is what’s happening in this moment. It can’t be other
than this. This is what it is, and that truth is always soothing.
Fearlessness also comes from benevolence and goodwill in the face of whatever
oppresses you. You are afraid, but instead of fighting what faces you, you embrace it and
accept it—you develop loving-kindness as a direct antidote to fear. This is expressed
beautifully in one of the famous images of the Buddha depicting the night of his
enlightenment. The Buddha is seated under the Bodhi tree, looking relaxed and
contemplative, and apparently surrounded by a protective shield. Surrounding him are the
maras, all of the afflictions that assail the mind. Some have spears aimed at the Buddha
and some are disguised in erotic imagery, aiming to disrupt the Buddha’s concentration,
trying to generate the fear that comes from being attacked. But the Buddha sits unmoved,
with one hand on the ground, as if to say, “I have a right to be here.” The shield that
surrounds him, that protects him from these afflictions, is his benevolence. His own
loving-kindness shining out from him is the dissolver of all afflictions.
Our own benevolence is actually the protection that renders enemies impotent. In the
picture, as the spears and arrows come to touch the shield around the Buddha, they fall to
the ground as flowers all around him. I like to think of those flowers as an illustration of
how each of us, by cultivating steadfast goodwill, can dissolve the forces of confusion
and fear in the world.
Seek a Spiritual Ground
By Traleg Kyabgon Rinpoche
The Buddhist view is that fear is ubiquitous. We all have an underlying sense of not being
settled, of not being secure. We have an existential feeling of uncertainty and instability,
and that makes us very anxious. Unfortunately, we usually apply the wrong antidote to
this ever-present sense of anxiousness.
To allay or mollify that fear, we try to find refuge in accumulating wealth, or trying to
make a big name for ourselves, or doing aerobics, or getting a new nose, or whatever. Yet
doing these things over and over again does not settle us. In fact, it does the opposite. It
exacerbates the very problem we are trying to address. Buddhism does not teach us to
completely give up all relationship with material things. That’s not the point. The point is
the attitude we take toward what we do and what we have. When we do things to try to
make ourselves secure, to establish our own sense of identity, we are barking up the
wrong tree. We enflame our negative emotions.
When these emotions become inflamed, our fears grow. They compound. They go
haywire. As the Buddha himself said, we get completely bogged down by fears of not
getting what we want to have, being separated from what we have, and getting what we
do not want. Unless we have some kind of spiritual focus, we do not feel any real sense
of groundedness, and so our efforts are not fruitful in the long run. We disperse our
psychic and spiritual energies right, left, and center, leaving ourselves exhausted and
frustrated. We think we’ve missed out on this or that, or that everybody is an obstacle to
our effort to improve ourselves. We want to have a certain kind of life, but everything is
frustrating that.
When we feel like that, all kinds of fears arise—fear of death, of old age, of our reality
crumbling, of ending up being nothing or nobody. On the other hand, if we are secure in
ourselves from having found some kind of spiritual focus, and we learn how to gather our
psychic and spiritual energies into ourselves, we can discover a kind of inner richness. If
we acknowledge the deep sense of emptiness we feel at the very bottom of our being,
which cannot be filled by any kind of love that we might get from other people or any
amount of money, we see that it can be filled only by the richness of our own spiritual
cultivation. If we do that, we will experience a sense of groundedness that allows us to
reduce and manage the fears we experience and, eventually, to overcome them.
The very act of dealing with fear is attaining fearlessness. We don’t do two things—first
overcoming fear and then starting on the project of developing fearlessness. All the fears
are not going to just magically disappear. We will need to develop stability and insight.
Stability in itself is not sufficient. Feeling a bit more calm and relaxed is not sufficient to
overcome the deep sense of anxiety and anxiousness at the core of our being. To
overcome it we need insight, which, according to Buddhism, involves profound reflection
on our lives. That includes looking deeply at our fear. Looking deeply shows us its nature
and teaches us how to work with it.
As we look deeply, we can see that there is not an object of fear separate from the subject
who is afraid. Think about it. How fearful one is in relation to an object varies from
individual to individual, and even with the same individual it varies from one time to
another. So how one experiences fear in relation to a particular object of fear this year
will be different from last year, or this week from last week, or this afternoon from this
morning.
With the stability of shamatha and the insight of vipashyana, we really begin to see the
interrelationship between the fear response and the object of fear. From the Buddhist
point of view, that’s very significant. We understand that we do not have two independent
things coming together: one who fears and what is feared. We then begin to develop some
appreciation for what is called interdependent arising—subject and object arising together
—which gives us a feeling of empowerment, of real choice, a lot of room to move around
in, and a real inkling of the Buddha’s wisdom.
These essays are based on teachings given at the program “Fear and Fearlessness: What
the Buddhists Teach.” This weekend of teachings, practice, and discussion was the first of
an annual series cosponsored by Lion’s Roar and the Omega Institute.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
How to Deal With Worrying With
Buddhist Practices
How to Practice Buddhism When You're a Nervous Wreck
By Barbara O'Brien
Barbara O'Brien is a Zen Buddhist practitioner who
studied at Zen Mountain Monastery. She is the author of
"Rethinking Religion" and has covered religion for The
Guardian, Tricycle.org, and other outlets.
Updated April 30, 2019
Worry and anxiety are part of life. In Buddhism, the
worry is also among the Five Hindrances
to enlightenment. The fourth hindrance, uddhacca-
kukkucca in Pali, is often translated "restlessness and
worry," or sometimes "restlessness and remorse."
Uddhacca, or restlessness, literally means "to shake." It
is a tendency to be over-excited or "revved up." For now,
however, we're going to look at mostly at kukkucca,
which the early sutras describe as remorse for things
done or not done in the past. Over time, the meaning of
kukkucca was expanded to include anxiety and worry.
Some of the old texts helpfully advise us to replace
worry with serenity. Oh sure, you might say. Like it's
easy. Don't worry; be happy! Needless to say, if worry is
a particular hindrance for you, just telling you to stop
worrying isn't much help. You've probably been trying to
do exactly that for years. So let's look at worry a little
more closely.
What Is Worry?
++++++++++++++++++
Dealing with anxiety
by Venerable Thubten Chodron on Jun 18, 2011 in Fear Anxiety and Other Emotions
http://thubtenchodron.org/2011/06/happiness-within/
Before talking about how to deal with anxiety, let’s do a
brief meditation that will help us release some of our
stress and anxiety. When meditating, sit comfortably.
You can cross your legs or sit with your feet flat on the
floor. Place the right hand on the left, the thumbs
touching so they make a triangle, in your lap against
your body. Sit up straight, with your head level, then
lower your eyes.
Setting a positive motivation
Before we begin the actual meditation, we generate our
motivation by thinking, "I will meditate in order to
improve myself, and by doing so may I be able to benefit
all the beings I come in contact with. In the long term,
may I eliminate all defilements and enhance all my good
qualities so that I can become a fully
enlightened Buddha in order to benefit all beings most
effectively." Even though enlightenment may seem a
long way off, by generating the intention to transform
our mind into one of an enlightened being, we gradually
approach that goal.
Meditation on the breath
One meditation found in all the Buddhist traditions is
the meditation on the breath. It helps to calm the mind,
develop concentration, and brings our attention to the
present moment. To focus on our breath and really
experience what it feels like to breathe, we have to let
go of the thoughts that chatter about the past and
future and bring our attention simply to what is
happening now. This is always more relaxing than the
hopes and fears of the past and the future, which exist
merely in our mind and are not happening in the present
moment.
Breathe normally and naturally—do not force your
breath and do not deep-breathe. Let your attention rest
at your abdomen. As you breathe in, be aware of the
sensations in your body as the air enters and leaves.
Notice that your abdomen rises as you inhale and falls
as you exhale. If other thoughts or sounds enter your
mind or distract you, just be aware that your attention
has strayed, and gently, but firmly, bring your attention
back to the breath. Your breath is like home—whenever
the mind wanders, bring your attention home to the
breath. Just experience the breath, be aware of what is
happening right now as you inhale and exhale. (Meditate
for however long you wish.)
Developing equanimity
Some people may think, "But I do care about others,
and that’s what makes me anxious," or "Because I care
so much about my kids and my parents, I worry about
them all the time." This kind of caring isn’t the open-
hearted loving-kindness that we are trying to develop in
Buddhist practice. This kind of caring is limited to only
a few people. Who are the people that we care about so
much? All the ones who are related to "me"—my kids,
my parents, my friends, my family. We are right back to
"me, me, me" again, aren’t we? This kind of caring
about others isn’t what we are trying to develop here.
Instead, we want to learn to care for others impartially,
without thinking some beings are more important and
others are less worthy. The more we can
develop equanimity and an open, caring heart towards
all, the more we’ll feel close to everyone else and the
more we will be able to reach out to them. We have to
train our mind in this broad attitude, expanding our care
from the small group of people around us so that it
gradually is extended to everyone—those we know and
those we don’t, and especially to those we don’t like.
To do this, start by thinking, "Everyone wants to be
happy, just like me, and nobody wants to suffer, just like
me." If we focus on that thought alone, there is no
space left for anxiety in our minds anymore. When we
look at each living being with this recognition and
immerse our minds in that thought, our mind will
automatically become very open and caring. Try doing
this today. Whenever you are looking at people—for
example, when you are in a shop, on the street, in a bus
—think, "This is a living being that has feelings,
someone who wants to be happy and doesn’t want to
suffer. This person is just like me." You will find that you
will no longer feel that they are complete strangers. You
will feel like you know them in some way and will
respect each of them.
Kindness of strangers
Then consider the tremendous kindness we received
from strangers, people that we do not know. So many
beings whom we don’t know personally have done
things that have helped us. For example, we received an
education due to the kindness of people who dedicated
their lives to building schools and establishing
educational programs. We ride on roads that exist due
to the effort of so many engineers and construction
workers whom we have never met. We probably do not
know the people who built our home, the architects,
engineers, construction crew, plumbers, electricians,
painters, and so forth. They may have built our home in
the summer, enduring the hot weather. We don’t know
these people, but because of their kindness and effort,
we have homes to live in and a temple where we can
come and meet together. We don’t even know who these
people are to say, "Thank you." We just come in, use the
buildings, and receive benefit from their effort. Seldom
do we consider what they had to go through so that we
could live so comfortably.
+++++++++++++++++++++
Freedom from Fear
BEING MINDFUL OF YOUR FEAR ALLOWS IT TO BECOME YOUR TEACHER
AND GIVES PURPOSE TO WHAT IS OTHERWISE MEANINGLESS SUFFERING.
Living in a fear-based culture inevitably affects your state of mind and the decisions you make. As a citizen you
may become more compliant, more willing to surrender your rights for vague promises of safety. As an employee
you are less demanding, less willing to take risks. And in your personal life you are more security oriented, and
thus less open to new possibilities-all because you see the future through the lens of fear. Viewing life in this
manner is not skillful. It is not that such concerns lack legitimacy -this is undeniably a time of danger and
instability in our society, and unwise actions and indifference could destroy the future for our children. The
problem is that the lens of fear distorts what you see. It focuses primarily on the negative, exaggerates the
potentially threatening, filters out alternative views, and causes you to compromise your core values out of the
urgent need to survive. Fear when not named narrows your vision, shuts down intuition as well as common-sense
reflection, and promotes violent actions. Stated more simply, fear that is not recognized and tended to with
mindfulness takes the life out of life. Your life energy is lost to dread as the body braces and the heart closes in
anticipation of what is to come.
It is difficult living in a time of fear, but here you are, and the challenge becomes finding a way not to be
consumed by it. This is best accomplished by first observing your responses to the culture of fear that surrounds
you. You can then use this knowledge to work with your personal fears. Your reaction to dread and to uncertainty
about yourself, your abilities, and what may happen to you imprison your spirit. Learning to work skillfully with
fear is essential to your finding freedom and happiness.
As you deepen your spiritual practice, you will inevitably encounter all your fears, some of which you may not
even know are within you. Being alert and curious about your fear allows it to become your teacher as well as to
serve your growth. This gives purpose to what is otherwise meaningless suffering.
Despite having often experienced fear, most of us do not have a clear definition of what it means in the context
of an individual's life. What one person classifies as fear, someone else would call anxiety, or another might label
panic. If you are to work with fear as a way of knowing yourself, it is helpful to sort through this confusion in
order to clarify what you are feeling.
Fear is usually described as an emotional response to a perception of danger, which elicits certain neuromuscular
and chemical reactions in the body. You feel it arise in response to something that you see or that you hear, to
sensations in your body, or to thoughts and emotions that appear in the mind. The presence of fear may be the
result of an accurate perception as well as a completely distorted one. Regardless, it is your belief in the
perception and your interpretation of its implications for your well-being that control the level of fear you
experience.
Hence, fear is an internal experience, a subjective response to the immediate moment or some future event;
therefore, you should regard fear with objective skepticism and not treat it as an absolute truth. This calls for you
to develop a certain distance from fear, to see it as a phenomenon that is predominant in this particular moment,
not the ultimate decision maker in your life.
There are two ways in which fear may be contextualized in order to begin working with it mindfully. The first one
is to treat it as one of three responses on a spectrum of frightened reactions to something. Lowest on this
spectrum is apprehension or anxious agitation, which is sometimes called anxiety. Then there is full-blown fear, a
far more stringent response by the nervous system. If the fear keeps expanding, it will accelerate into the
highest distress response: outright terror or panic.
Each of the three responses is subjective, happening inside you. But the more established you are in mindfulness
that is learned in meditation, the less likely you are to escalate from apprehension to fear and then terror. In
order to dis-identify with fear as it is arising, my teacher Ajhan Sumedho suggests making a mental note to
yourself: "Anxiety is like this; fear is like this."
Another skillful method to gain insight is to make a distinction between fear and the anxiety of life itself. When
there is a specific object to be afraid of-a noise in the dark, a verbal threat, an uncertainty regarding a
commitment, the outcome of a medical test, a truck veering into your lane-what you feel is fear in relation to
that object.
Anxiety, on the other hand, is anxiety about, rather than of.You are anxious about growing older, or your child
getting hurt, or your marriage lasting. There is no specific object of alarm. Instead you are responding to the
frailty and temporary nature of existence.
The truth is that you will never be absolutely safe. All things change constantly, even what is most precious. You
know that you and those you love will die, but not when or how. This is the angst of life, the price of being a
conscious human being. It is not a flaw, although many people cannot let loose of seeing it in such a manner. It
is just the way life is constructed. When your awareness of this vulnerability is triggered, you can be swept into
panic, collapse into depression, or desperately try to distract yourself. One of the values of spiritual practice is
that you are able to come to terms with this anxiety in a conscious manner. Your life becomes more integrated
because you are no longer trying to deny or avoid what is true.
Naturally, what often happens is that you compound the misery of a particular fear you may be experiencing with
this general anxiety that is inherent in the human condition. When this takes place, the turbulence of all your
apprehensions pours into the specific fear, and you suffer more. For instance, you simply forget a meeting, yet
you are traumatized, certain that you are losing your ability to focus. Or someone disappoints you and you
collapse into complete self-hatred, fearing that you have no worth to the other. With mindfulness practice, you
learn to see how the untrained mind is agitated by the human condition and how not to allow this general anxiety
to fuel your fear in a specific situation. You also gain tolerance for the unpleasantness of uncertainty and also the
naturalness of your own imperfection. You have confidence that "life is like this." You cannot and are not
supposed to miraculously fix it; rather, you gain the insight that happiness and peace come from relating to life
just as it is.
Levels of Fear
You can begin to deepen your understanding of how fear may be affecting you by becoming mindful of the four
levels of alertness in your body and mind. First is the normal state of alertness you experience walking down the
street, driving, or being at work. You are awake to change in the environment. If you suddenly perceive a
possible danger, the body-mind switches to the second level of alertness, vigilance. This is natural and healthy,
and the vigilance ends once the danger passes.
The next level occurs when there's a prolonged sense of anxiety or fear. The bodymind goes into hypervigilance
and stays there ready to fight, flee, or freeze in place until the trauma passes. Hypervigilance creates a tunnel-
vision effect in which you primarily experience life through the lens of fear or anxiety. It can become a pattern if
your life is so challenged that you repeatedly fall into this state. Hypervigilance in adulthood can have its roots in
childhood trauma, or result from working in a hostile situation or from being in relationship with a psychologically
or physically abusive partner. Someone who is hypervigilant often interprets interactive signals differently than
the norm and as a result suffers much tension and misunderstanding. Our society is presently showing signs of
being in this hypervigilant stage.
The final level of body-mind response to fear is the frozen traumatic reflex that occurs when danger is continuous
or your nervous system loses the ability to perceive that the danger has passed. It can occur if you are thwarted
in your effort to fight or flee and are locked into a pattern of incomplete motion. Or it can also arise when you
brace or contract for an impact, such as often happens in auto accidents. It can also be caused by threatening
emotional situations, particularly in childhood.
If your circumstances were such that you continually sought to avoid drawing attention to yourself or you
repeatedly contracted muscles to armor yourself against physical or verbal blows, these responses become a
permanently frozen part of your neuromuscular system and can be triggered by stress. You can try to detect a
frozen fear pattern in yourself by noting sensations of unease or numbness in the body, or feelings of mental
disconnection or of not being in the body.
It might take you quite by surprise, but hypervigilance and frozen responses will usually present themselves at
some point in your meditation practice. Almost everyone seems to have some degree of lockedin fear that needs
to be released; however, the amount varies dramatically. Usually you will experience some physical and possibly
emotional discomfort when it starts arising. Sometimes it might be accompanied by unidentifiable images or
memories of a specific event; at other times there is only a raw sense of fear or of bodily discomfort. Because it
is unpleasant, there is a tendency to distract the mind or to simply give up meditation. It has been my
experience that if you can stay with the uncomfortable experience, it will eventually unwind itself in both its
physical and mental aspects.
If you are fear based, you might move from one obsession or worry to another as a way to cope with your
general anxiety. When you go to a meditation retreat, you get to watch the mind become agitated and actually
look for a problem to grab hold of, and you come to see that what the mind chooses to focus on is not reliable as
a priority. One yogi I met on retreat learned to say "my old friend fear" whenever his mind contracted into fear.
This enabled him to no longer give it credibility, and the world became a safer, more enjoyable place for him. But
beware of identifying yourself as a "fearful person." You may often see life through the lens of fear, but it is only
a mental state that is coloring your perception; you are not that fear.
This is a critical understanding. If you jump into a cold lake and your body gets cold, you don't suddenly think
you are a cold lake; you are simply cold as a response to the environment. Fear is like that: Your nervous system
may be flooded with the sensations of fear, but this is still only a response.
Meditating on Fear
Most people who start practicing mindfulness of fear realize for the first time how much of their behavior is
motivated by fear. If this happens to you, you may begin to feel discouraged or possibly defensive, or to
adamantly assert that your fear is justified and even needed. You are used to fear and you know how to work
with it, so these responses are natural. It is as though you are afraid to be without fear! Of course, you might be
right; I can only report that it has not worked that way for the yogis I have known. Without exception, as their
reliance on fear has diminished, their sense of well-being has grown.
You can see what is true for you by mindfully working with some of your smaller, more approachable fears and
then seeing what happens. Be patient, please. It helps to remind yourself that fear is not a stigma. Even the
Buddha had to work with fear, which he describes in the "Sutta on Fear and Dread" in the Majjhima Nikaya.
Although it may seem as though fear is dominating your decisions, if you look more closely, you will find that
there's an energetic response that is even more powerful, and that is love-love in all its forms: appreciation,
generosity, caring, tolerance, patience, creativity, and service. The core spiritual teaching about fear is that it
inevitably arises whenever you experience a sense of separateness, either from others or from the environment.
Fear overwhelms the mind, causes you to project that which you find despicable in yourself onto others, breeds
paranoia, and fuels self-justifying, self-serving behavior.
As you grow spiritually and begin to see how interdependent all of life is, your sense of separation diminishes,
and fear then starts to lose its grip. For this reason it is sometimes said that a person who has fully realized the
dharma is completely without fear. Unfortunately, for the rest of us, there remains the ever-present need for
practice.
Loving-kindness practice is the classic antidote for fear. If you see through the lens of love, you are not afraid of
what is out there in the same way, even though it remains just as difficult and may still succeed in harming you.
Your relationships to fear and to yourself are thus changed by experiencing the threatening aspects of life
through the lens of love. Doing loving-kindness practice formally for just five minutes each morning, followed by
saying loving-kindness phrases as you go through your daily routines, may well begin to make a difference in
your life. I specifically suggest doing the following loving-kindness meditation to work with fear: "May I find
freedom from fear in my life. May I also in turn help others find freedom from fear in their lives. And may I meet
the fear in our culture with the courage of the open heart, which acts with decisiveness but never divisiveness."
You can begin practicing mindfulness of fear today. When your mind seems to be caught in a storm of thoughts
about how bad the world is or about something in your own life, take a moment to notice what happens in your
body. Then notice how your mind is communicating with images and words. Remember to be curious and
receptive without taking any of it personally. Let your heart open to the suffering the fear is causing.
The story is often told of a monk who lived in isolation in a cave where he painted beautiful murals on the wall as
part of his meditation practice. With his strongly developed concentration and acquired skill, he painted a
ferocious tiger that appeared as real as any live one. It seemed so real, it scared him to death! All things that
arise in your mind are like the monk's brush strokes on the cave wall-none of them, not even the ones that seem
to be the most solid, are composed of lasting, unchanging substance.
When the fear feels stuck, realize that you are clinging to a perception that is merely painted on the walls of your
mind. It's this clinging, not the danger, no matter how genuinely threatening it might be, that is the cause of
your greatest distress. The proper response is threefold: continual mindfulness of the fear, deep compassion for
the suffering it is causing, and cultivation of equanimity that allows you to stay with it. You will find that the
dharma will do the rest.
by Phillip Moffitt
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
oday, in this age of terrorism — and even the threat of nuclear
attack from North Korea — fear has become top of mind, again.
Creating an atmosphere of dread is the goal of terrorists and
dictators. It’s easy to say, “I can’t live my life in fear” and then
pretend to go about your business. But, even if you bravely brush the
fear aside — in the background the nervous “look-over-your-
shoulder-to-be-sure” feeling remains.
But how do we genuinely, in our hearts and minds,
overcome fear? What did Buddha teach on
overcoming fear? Buddha faced down not only
Mara (inner demons), but also his own cousin
Devadatta (who tried to kill Him more than once),
charging elephants, Brahmins and falling rocks
and other dangers. Iconic of His fearlessness is
the hand held up in the Abhaya mudra. Who was
this person, not afraid of death?
It’s easy to understand the notion that a good person will receive a
reward —good Karma leading to good rebirth as a Buddhist belief.
Yet, Buddha made it clear in the same Sutra, that the real key to
freedom from fear is the person “who has abandoned passion,
desire, fondness, thirst, fever, and craving for sensuality.” This
person has lived the Eightfold Path, taught by Buddha, based on the
Four Noble Truths. This person, who has removed attachments and
craving, has no reason to fear. If you don’t feel attached to illusory
enjoyments, you don’t fear losing them.
Storm Meditation
For example, let’s say you are afraid of thunder storms. Right now, in
this moment, your house is shaking with the rumble of a ferocious
storm. Wind lashes your house, the trees beat your roof, the
windows shake. Instead of turning on the television full blast, and
trying to “forget” the storm outside, Buddhist teachers might
suggest you sit in meditation, listen to the storm, hear every sound,
watch and observe your own fearful thoughts.
See the panic. Watch and observe in as detached a
way as possible. Stay only in the present.
Observe your own breath, how fast and fearful it
seems, but don’t judge — simply observe. The
simple act of observation, in the present moment,
almost immediately slows your pulse rate, your
breath and your racing, fearful thoughts.
The key to successful mindfulness is detached observation. When
you first start observing your fear, you’ll still feel entangled in it. But
observe even that entanglement. Don’t try to remove the
entanglement, or analyze it, or destroy it — simply observe it.
Abhaya Sutta
Fearless Sutra
Translated from the Pali by Thanissaro Bhikkhu
Then Janussoni the Brahman went to the Blessed One and, on
arrival, exchanged courteous greetings with him. After an exchange
of friendly greetings and courtesies, he sat to one side. As he was
sitting there he said to the Blessed One: “I am of the view and
opinion that there is no one who, subject to death, is not afraid or in
terror of death.”
NOTES
Buddhist Psychological
Practices That Can Help
Relieve Anxiety
08/03/2015 12:03 pm ET Updated Aug 03, 2016
Many people use the words fear and anxiety
interchangeably, as if they referred to identical emotional
states. Yet while we may conceive of the two words as
entirely corresponding, the neurobiology are quite
different. The physiological reactions that occur when we
hear the crackling sound of footsteps behind us, while
walking alone on a wooded trail, creates a soaring heart
rate, a knotted stomach, an limbs activated, ready to run.
In some truly overwhelming situations, we may literally
‘freeze’ with fear, unable to move, such as someone frozen
in the path of a charging bear or tiger.
Yes, the mind can really play tricks that make it all to
easy to abandon the present, which is, of course, the only
place of true safety and utility. When we find the mind
latching onto unlikely narratives that we can’t reason with
or let go, sometimes we have to learn how to trick the
mind into disarming itself.
The Skillful Escape from Anxiety and Worry: given that the
worrying mind is seeking a sense of security — which is
revealed through reviewing its appeal — I might ask
myself: “what skillful ways can I provide the mind with a
sense of security in times of uncertainty?” Skillful
escapes generally require creativity. I might conclude
that rather than worrying, my mind would more fruitfully
establish a sense of security by reflecting on all the times
in life I’ve been caught off guard by sudden events — job
losses, relationships dissolving — yet survived without
any preparation. Such a reflections build a sense of
reassurance, and meet our underlying need.
I hope the above is of help to some and worth any time
you invested into it.
+++++++++++++
Fear And How To Overcome Fear: A Buddhist
Perspective
Bhante T. Seelananda, Bhavana Society Forest Monastery, High View, WV, USA
Fear is an unpleasant emotion that arises mainly because of craving. Craving and
attachment are the causes for many unwholesome, unpleasant, and evil things in
life. It is because of these two that we wander in samsāra, the cycle of birth and
death. In contrast, fearlessness is the state of perfect peace, tranquility, and the
Naturally, all beings experience fear. They all are afraid of either of their present,
past or future. All beings are called beings (satta) because they all are clinging to
Only arahants are entirely freed from fear. They have achieved the state of
fearlessness. That is why they are called non-beings (asatta). [1] We cling not
only to the five aggregates of existence, but also to many other material and
immaterial things around us. Therefore, as long as we attach, grasp, and cling to
Why Fear?
With this short article I intend to clarify the Buddhist perspective on fear and how
to achieve the state of fearlessness. If one were able to observe and read our
mentality right now, one would be able to see that we all are like spiders
entangled in our own woven webs. We wove our webs of attachment and
expectations and got trapped. That is why we are suffering from fear of getting
lost and fear of many different things about us and around us. For instance, as
we see here in the West, many parents are fearful of things such as their
children's moving out after they turn 18, job security, mortgage payments, debts,
credit card bills, etc. which contribute to constant distress. At the same time,
children themselves fear for their parents' insecurity, such as fear of aging,
sickness, and death. Then, at least for some extent, because of their
untrustworthiness both husband and wife may fear that the other one could
leave them at anytime. Likewise, regarding many other factors contribute to the
rise fear in individuals. Fear does not arise by itself alone, but in combination with
or permanently. The Buddha said, "Separation from loved ones is sorrow." Not
only actual separation, but even thinking of their future or past, based on the
experience they have gained, most people undergo unutterable agony and
create anxiety and worry. Mainly, because they do not think of and are not ready
to accept the fact that all animate or inanimate things are changing (anicca) they
have fear and suffer. As the Buddha taught us, nothing is certain or permanent.
In other words, nothing remains the same. That is one of the fundamental
teachings of the Buddha. Most people simply go with the flow, but they
themselves do not know that it means that they are simply floating. The
teachings of the Buddha is not to simply float along in the river of existence. It is
to strive and get out of the river of existence to the state of non-existence where
there is no fear, sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, or dispair at all because it is not
an existence. Those who have achieved that experience enjoy that bliss.
Fear of Death
As the Buddha said, "All beings die, but death is not the end of all things. Death
is only the end of one life." Thereafter, one will have to go according to the
volitional actions (kamma) done while living here, in this world. We all experience
fear of facing death. Actually, for the worldlings, their greatest fear is death. That
is why even the Buddha said, "All tremble at violence; all fear death. Putting
oneself in the place of another, one should neither kill nor cause another to kill."
However, if we get ready for that we can face death bravely. The Buddha's
instruction for that is to develop and cultivate mindfulness. This is the way to the
of death with the guidance of the teachings of the Buddha in our daily lives we
can find positive results or aspects of the fearful and dreadful situations we
encounter. With fear of future uncertainties about their own jobs, mortgage,
children's schooling, college or university entrance or exams and so on, day and
night people are suffering from boundless fear to achieve these so-called goals.
However, unexpectedly fear arises and collapes the mansion of hope. What
should be done then? Nothing but coming to the present moment to understand
the situation mindfully and make up your own mind to face it more positively,
The best thing to do is seek the cause of the problem objectively. That means
removing the focus on individuals. Strive to find the root of the situation as not
his, her, or their faults, but as based on conditions. Then seek the cause and
remove the cause of the action. If you can remove the cause you can definitely
human nature is to panic, suffer or obsess over every single unachievable target.
understand the benefits you have gained from blessings in disguise rather being
in a panic.
Suppose you are laid off – think of your own quality time with the family and
mediation, dhamma to your kids, to limit your children’s screen time in order to
save their eyes, teach them how to cook, give the essential life skills, improve
Buddha, and enjoy the free time visiting a nearby park with the friends and
time with the kids when they are young. They feel it, enjoy it, appreciate it. When
you hear the news "laid off," parents and kids get the message differently. While
the kids may celebrate it, parents will take it as it is the end of the world.
Although you need money, if the given situation cannot be changed, you have to
learn how to turn the bad news or bad period to an advantage. Positive mindset
is important. Learning Buddha's teaching will definitely guide you to see and
As an emotional arousal fear arises in the mind as a mental state. When there is
fear, our mind is directly connected to our heart. Therefore, by that time, both
our brain and heart are guided not by intelligence but by emotion. Emotion is
always harmful. Emotions are based on greed, hatred, and delusion. This is why
cycle. Where there is fear there is emotion and where there is emotion there is
fear. Therefore, as long as fear exists emotions exist and vise-a-versa. However,
when we are intelligent and wise enough to understand and control our emotions
cause pain or a threat. According to the teachings of the Buddha, all those who
have not yet completely eradicated their defilements are under the influence of
fear. That means only the Enlightened Ones are entirely be free from fear. With
akutobhaya).
As the Buddha very clearly and comprehensively said in the Dhammapada, fear
arises because of craving (tanhā).He said, "From craving springs grief, from
craving springs fear. For him who is wholly free from craving there is no grief,
One should not forget that the cause of all dukkha, unsatisfactoriness is craving.
Once the Buddha himself said that the world is ensnared by craving (Tanhāya
uddito loko). [4] In accordance with the teachings of the Buddha craving should
be tamed and entirely eliminated by mindfulness. This is why the Buddha taught
and to go to the real refuge, rather going to refuge of many things in the world
real refuge and go to the real refuge. Refuge is never found in another person.
In the Dhammapada, the Buddha pointed out what happens when fear arises in
the minds of uninstructed, worldly people, average persons. Since they have fear
of many things, they search for safety. Therefore, they go to many a refuge. The
Buddha explains,
In accordance with the above explanation, when fear strikes one cannot
understand things clearly. Therefore, one does not know what is to be done and
understanding the real refuge. Not only that, with their perverted perception,
they grasp things as mine, me, and myself and then they take whatever is
That is the danger in them. Therefore, seeking to allay their fear they start to do
many types of rites and rituals. This is because of their fear of losing of what they
silabbataparāmāsa). In such away they are tightly fettered to the cycle of birth
due to their fear, they believe that there is a permanent entity as a soul or self
that needs to be protected and will save them from fear. They mistakenly think
formations are myself, and consciousness is myself. In such a way, they grasp
five aggregates into four ways (5x4=20 ways) thinking, "This is my form, this is
personalization or personality belief. With that they have doubt about themselves
referring to the past, future, and the present. For them there is no way to come
to the path of fearlessness at all. As the Buddha said one has to cut off the above
three fetters first and follow the path to fearlessness based on the only real
The Buddha has talked about fear even before his enlightenment. According to
the discourse titled "Fear and Dread" in the Majjhima Nikaya [6] he clearly said
that fear and dread arise because of impurity of bodily conduct, verbal conduct,
conduct...
mind as well such as covetousness, lust, ill will, hate, sloth and torpor, envy,
as we have attachment by any means, we have fear. Again, it is clear the words
of the Buddha, “Attachment arises because of craving and fear arises because of
order to overcome fear one has to remove the cause of fear. That is the most
fool, not because of the wise man. Thus the fool brings fear,
the wise man brings no fear; the fool brings trouble, the
Those who find the way to overcome fear should understand this as a fact. So in
short, fear arises because of foolishness. Being wise we can keep fear at bay. No
doubt that if we are wise enough we can understand many things regarding fear
be wise enough and strive to find the cause of fear. That is the first method to
overcome fear.
fear we cannot understand that we are dwelling either in the past or in the
future. The problem is nothing but this. That itself is the cause for insecurity. You
are not dwelling in the present moment. You are full of delusion, full of
expectations, this means either brooding over the past or delving into the future.
If you come to the present moment you see what is going on right now. You see
what you have grasped as your own is rapidly changing and vanishing. The
Buddha said, "All what is dear and delight to you is in the nature of changing and
lay men." Therefore, in order to dispel, remove, and completely relinquish your
ignorance through which you are shrouded from head to toe and come to the
present moment which is the precious moment. He says, "Let go of the past, let
go of the future, let go of the present, and cross over to the farther shore of
existence. With mind wholly liberated, you shall come no more to birth and
death." [8] Once the Buddha said, "Those who see something to fear where there
is nothing to fear, and see nothing to fear where there is something to fear
(Abhaye bhayadassino
bhaye cābhayadassino
micchāditthi samādānā
In short, one should dwell in the present moment, be aware of what is going on
now. Then, one can dispel the darkness of fear. That is the second method we
3. Let us come to the third method. Apply the six factors to any object whether
animate or inanimate that comes to your mind through the six senses. What are
the six factors? Giving full attention and understanding the object as something
conditioned, fragile and dependently arisen, mentally repeat, "This is not mine,
not I am (not me), not myself. This is impermanent, unsatisfactory, and not self."
This is how one comes to understand reality as it is -- to see things as they really
are. Then, you can abandon the arisen fear because you see the uselessness and
effect or causal conditionality. One has to reason out things, rationalize things
with a clear mind applying wise attention. This is the way to overcome fear. The
practiced the same thing while he was at the palace and while practicing as an
And while I dwelt there [in the woods], a wild animal would
the wind would rustle the leaves. I thought: What now if this
when it comes upon me? While I walked, the fear and dread
came upon me; I neither stood nor sat nor lay down till I had
subdued that fear and dread. While I stood, the fear and
dread came upon me; I neither walked nor sat nor lay down
till I had subdued that fear and dread. While I sat, the fear
and dread came upon me; I neither walked nor stood nor lay
down till I had subdued that fear and dread. While I lay
down, the fear and dread came upon me; I neither walked
nor stood nor sat down till I had subdued that fear and
be said. [10]
That is how he dispelled the arisen fear with a clear mind, wise attention and a
firm determination. When the people are plagued with delusion and fear they are
upside down.
5. One day a certain brahmin ascetic named Bawari sent his sixteen disciples to
the Buddha in order to see the Buddha and ask a particular question based on
ignorance. As they went to the Buddha as instructed by their teacher they first
asked questions mentally and then asked the question on ignorance. Thereupon,
the Buddha gave the right answer. Being satisfied and gladdened, they then
asked their personal questions as well.One disciple named Ajita asked the
'person'.]
According to this expression it is clear that the greatest fear for humans
they have. This itself is a cause for fear. Therefore, the remedy for this is
dhanam). [12] Therefore, this is the fifth method for overcoming fear.
remember that one of them is fear. He said, “Bhikkhus, there are these four ways
of taking a wrong course. What four? One takes a wrong course because of
desire, because of hatred, because of delusion, or because of fear. These are the
four ways of taking a wrong course.” What really happens if one takes these four,
wrong courses?
So if one does not take the wrong course of fear, that itself is a way to remove
the fear of going off course (agati). When one takes these wrong courses one
7. For our mental protection, the Buddha expounded many different protective
discourses (paritta). Specifically, for the protection from fear and worry he
called "The Discourse on Banner Protection" (Dhajagga Sutta) where the Buddha
said,
pass away, or may not pass away. What is the reason for
this? Sakka, the Lord of gods, O monks, is not free from lust,
not free from hate, not free from delusion, and is therefore
liable to fear, terror, fright and flight. I also say unto you O
arise in you when you have gone to the forest or to the foot
gods and men, the Buddha, the Blessed One.” Monks, if you
may arise in you will pass away. If you fail to think of me,
the Sangha (the Order) thus: “Of good conduct is the Order
lust, free from hate, is free from delusion, and is not liable
This is another method to dispel your fear. Recollect the qualities of the Buddha,
Dhamma and the Sangha. This works very well. All monastics dwelling in the
woods do this for their protection from various spirits and creatures like snakes.
8. According to the teachings of the Buddha it is because of not knowing the fear
craving. This samsāric fear is to be understood properly. Only then, we can find
the real remedy for this malady. The Buddha says, "Monks, thissamsāra is
know this samsāric fear we do not cling to things and strive to live as if we are
not dying. Since we all have to face death, having fear of death, we should do
more and more good deeds in order to be reborn in good destinations. We should
do more and more good deeds for the happy and peaceful samsāric journey as
well. So knowing the malady of this samsāra itself is a way to dispel the fear of
Buddha said how the uninstructed worldling speaks when there are three type of
perils where mother and son will be separated (fear of separation). As they say,
they are the peril of a great conflagration, a great deluge, and a time of perilous
turbulence in the wilderness. However, the Buddha himself pointed out some
and son. What three? The peril of old age, the peril of
illness, and the peril of death. When the son is growing old,
the mother cannot fulfill her wish: ‘Let me grow old, but
may my son not grow old!’ And when the mother is growing
old, the son cannot fulfill his wish: ‘Let me grow old, but
may my mother not grow old!’ “When the son has fallen ill,
the mother cannot fulfill her wish: ‘Let me fall ill, but may
my son not fall ill!’ And when the mother has fallen ill, the
son cannot fulfill his wish: ‘Let me fall ill, but may my
mother not fall ill!’ “When the son is dying, the mother
cannot fulfill her wish: ‘Let me die, but may my son not die!’
And when the mother is dying, the son cannot fulfill his
wish: ‘Let me die, but may my mother not die!’ “These are
substance or soul. With this understanding you can dispel and overcome existing
fear and fear that may arise in future. That is the ninth method.
10. The Buddha delivered a special discourse on five types of fearful animosities.
Here, the Buddha clearly pointed out that as long as one has not subduded the
five types of fear one is not safe because one still has tendencies to be born in
the animal realm, hungry ghost realm, or other woeful states such as hells. That
is the fear in samsāra. No one can escape from this fear, this danger if they have
not realized the Four Noble Truths. Addressing the householder, Anāthapindika,
That is how one enters the state of fearlessness. In order to complete his or her
final mission there are three more stages to accomplish, namely the once
returner, non-returner, and arahantship. The arahant is the real person who has
completely cut off fear and attained the state of fearlessness (abhaya). He or she
has no fear at all of the defilements greed, hatred, and delusion. The Buddha is
the most excellent Fearless One in the world who brings fearlessness to the
whole world. In this manner, let us understand the nature of fear and how to
overcome fear to attain a state of fearlessness as the Buddha has taught. That is
Summary
3. Apply the six factors to anything that comes to your mind through senses
happening
Sangha
9. Understand the three perils of old age, illness, and death; and finally
10. Strive to eradicate the five fears and animosities to attain the state of
eradicate fear.
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Healthy Fear
However, right now we need the healthy fear that arises from taking stock
of our present situation so that we can resolve to do something about it.
For example, there is no point in a smoker being scared of dying of lung
cancer unless there is something that he or she can or will do about it, i.e.
stop smoking. If a smoker has a sufficient fear of dying of lung cancer, he
or she will take steps to kick the habit. If he prefers to ignore the danger
of lung cancer, he will continue to create the causes of future suffering,
living in denial and effectively giving up control.
Balanced Fear
A balanced fear of our delusions and the suffering to which they inevitably
give rise is therefore healthy because it serves to motivate constructive
action to avoid a real danger. We only need fear as an impetus until we
have removed the causes of our vulnerability through finding spiritual,
inner refuge and gradually training the mind. Once we have done this, we
are fearless because we no longer have anything that can harm us, like a
Foe Destroyer (someone who has attained liberation, defeated the foe of
the delusions) or a Buddha (a fully enlightened being).
Fear of Death
Or maybe we’re afraid of death. Again, though, as we are definitely going to
die, that fear is not constructive and will lead to inappropriate responses
such as denial or a sense of futility or meaninglessness in our life.
However, although we have to die, we don’t have to die with an
uncontrolled mind. It is therefore wise to transform our fear of dying into a
fear of dying with an uncontrolled mind, the motivation that will ensure we
prepare for a peaceful and controlled death.
Fear of Rejection
Or maybe we are afraid of rejection. Again, from where does this fear
actually stem? Perhaps it is the fear of people disliking us. So what can we
do about that? Change our mind and like them instead. That is in our
control.
And:
The source of all our fear comes from our own uncontrolled minds or
“delusions.”
There are fears that arise from attachment, such as the fear and anxiety of
not finding or being separated from something or someone we feel we
need for our security or happiness.
There are the fears that arise from anger and hatred. Some fears are
directly proportional to our feeling of being threatened by others, which is
the reason we get angry and mentally or physically try to push the person
away.
And in particular, there are fears that arise from the mind of self-grasping
ignorance, which is the root of all other delusions, and thus the source of
all fears. To overcome this root of all fear, Buddha taught the truth of
emptiness, or no self.
Suppose that last night we dreamt a tiger was chasing us. Whilst we were
dreaming, the tiger appeared very vividly to exist from its own side, which
is why we developed fear and ran away from it. We felt strongly we were
being chased by a real tiger and had no sense that the tiger was just and
appearance to our mind. Yet when we woke up, we realized that the tiger
was nothing more than a projection of our own mind-it did not exist from
its own side, in our small bedroom! We immediately realized our mistake
and saw that the tiger was nothing more than a projection of our own
mind, and so our fear subsided.
This is a very profound subject and not easy to understand. For more
information, consult the books Transform Your Life , The New Heart of
Wisdom, or Joyful Path of Good Fortune. It is also very important to find a
qualified teacher who can give you oral teachings, explaining this subject
to you from his or her own experience.
The cause of all fear is self-grasping ignorance and all the delusions, such
as selfishness, attachment, and anger, which arise from that ignorance, as
well as all the unskilful actions motivated by those delusions. Therefore, to
find freedom from fear, we need to identify and uproot all our delusions,
and especially our self-cherishing and self-grasping ignorance. To find out
all about these two ego minds and how to overcome them, see Transform
Your Life or Eight Steps to Happiness.
Conqueror Buddha
Seeing that Siddhartha could not be frightened into abandoning his
meditation, Devaputra Mara tried instead to distract him by manifesting
countless beautiful women, but Siddhartha responded by developing even
deeper concentration. In this way, he triumphed over all the demons in the
world, which is why he subsequently became known as a “Conqueror
Buddha”.
Siddhartha continued with his meditation until dawn, when he attained the
vajra-like concentration. With this concentration, which is the very last
mind of a limited being, he removed the final veils of unknowing from his
mind and in the next moment became a Buddha, a fully enlightened being.
Buddha’s Blessings
There is nothing that Buddha does not know. Because he or she has
awakened from the sleep of ignorance and removed all obstructions from
his mind, he or she knows everything of the past, present, and future
simultaneously and directly. Moreover, Buddha has great compassion that
is completely impartial, embracing all living beings without discrimination.
He benefits all living beings without exception by emanating various forms
throughout the universe and by bestowing his blessings on their minds.
Through receiving Buddha’s blessings, all beings, even the lowliest
animals, sometimes develop peaceful and virtuous states of mind.
Eventually, through meeting an emanation of Buddha in the form of a
Spiritual Guide, everyone will have the opportunity to enter the spiritual
path to liberation and enlightenment. As the great Indian Buddhist Master
Nagarjuna said, there is no one who has not received help from Buddha.
For more information on the qualities of a Buddha, see Joyful Path of Good
Fortune and Ocean of Nectar
For more explanation of how to develop and increase our mind of love,
see Transform Your Life or Eight Steps to Happiness.
We are Travelers
The fact of the matter is that this world is not our home. We are travelers,
passing through. We came from our previous life, and in a few years, or a
few days, we shall move on to our next life. We entered this world empty-
handed and alone, and we shall leave empty-handed and alone. Everything
we have accumulated in this life, including our very body, will be left
behind. All that we can take with us from one life to the next are the
imprints of the positive and negative actions we have created. If we ignore
death we shall waste our life working for things that we shall only have to
leave behind, creating many negative actions in the process, and having to
travel on to our next life with nothing but a heavy burden of negative
karma.
For more information on the subject of death and dying, see Living
Meaningfully, Dying Joyfully .
When we recognize this, we can replace the fear and anxiety associated
with attachment with a healthy fear of what will happen if we make no
steps to overcome our attachment. This will motivate us to apply the
opponent to attachment rather than constantly give into it.
Delusions such as attachment are our real enemy. It is our own delusions
that have created all the pain and problems we have ever experienced in
the past or will experience in the future. Were it not for our delusions, we
would already be enjoying the unending peace and bliss of nirvana. If we
are patient with outer enemies in time we may win them round to our side,
but we cannot afford to tolerate the inner enemy of delusion. Unless we
take steps to oppose the delusions in our own mind, they will continue to
create problems for us, life after life. Delusions are self-perpetuating and
will never end of their own accord.
We can try this following simple visualization to let go of fear and anxiety.
Sitting in a comfortable position for meditation, with a straight back, we
close our eyes and breathe naturally through our nose. Then we spend a
little time identifying what it is we are currently afraid of. We identify our
deluded, unhealthy fears, such as the fear of dying, the fear of loss, the
fear of failure, and so forth. Using our wisdom, we understand that all
these fears, and all dangers, arise because of our deluded minds and
negative actions. We then visualize these fears together with their actual
causes (negative minds and actions) in the form of dense thick smoke, and
we breathe it out. This smoke leaves our nostrils and disappears to the
furthest reaches of space, where it completely disappears, never to return.
As we inhale, we imagine we are breathing in all the pure, inspiring energy
and fearlessness of all holy beings in the form of blissful white light, which
fills our body and mind. After meditating like this for a while, we feel that
our body and mind are now completely pure and that we have received the
blessings and protection of all holy beings. Our body feels light and supple,
and our mind is clear, peaceful, and fearless.
“It is not work that kills men; it is worry. Work is healthy; you
can hardly put more upon a man than he can bear. Worry is the
rust upon the blade. It is not the movement that destroys the
machinery but the friction.” ~ Henry Ward Beecher
“If you are distressed by anything external, the pain is not due
to the thing itself, but to your estimate of it; and this you have
the power to revoke at any moment.” ~ Marcus Aurelius
“90% of the things you worry about are out of your control so
it’s not helpful to worry. The other 10% you can control so do
something about it instead of worrying.”
++++++++++++++
And yet, fewer among us are poor, fewer are hungry, fewer children are dying,
and more men and women can read than ever before. In many countries,
recognition of women’s and minority rights is now the norm. There is still much
work to do, of course, but there is hope and there is progress.
How strange, then, to see such anger and great discontent in some of the world’s
richest nations. In the United States, Britain and across the European Continent,
people are convulsed with political frustration and anxiety about the future.
Refugees and migrants clamor for the chance to live in these safe, prosperous
countries, but those who already live in those promised lands report great
uneasiness about their own futures that seems to border on hopelessness.
Why?
A small hint comes from interesting research about how people thrive. In one
shocking experiment, researchers found that senior citizens who didn’t feel useful
to others were nearly three times as likely to die prematurely as those who did
feel useful. This speaks to a broader human truth: We all need to be needed.
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Being “needed” does not entail selfish pride or unhealthy attachment to the
worldly esteem of others. Rather, it consists of a natural human hunger to serve
our fellow men and women. As the 13th-century Buddhist sages taught, “If one
lights a fire for others, it will also brighten one’s own way.”
Virtually all the world’s major religions teach that diligent work in the service of
others is our highest nature and thus lies at the center of a happy life. Scientific
surveys and studies confirm shared tenets of our faiths. Americans who prioritize
doing good for others are almost twice as likely to say they are very happy about
their lives. In Germany, people who seek to serve society are five times likelier to
say they are very happy than those who do not view service as important.
Selflessness and joy are intertwined. The more we are one with the rest of
humanity, the better we feel.
This helps explain why pain and indignation are sweeping through prosperous
countries. The problem is not a lack of material riches. It is the growing number
of people who feel they are no longer useful, no longer needed, no longer one with
their societies.
In America today, compared with 50 years ago, three times as many working-age
men are completely outside the work force. This pattern is occurring throughout
the developed world — and the consequences are not merely economic. Feeling
superfluous is a blow to the human spirit. It leads to social isolation and
emotional pain, and creates the conditions for negative emotions to take root.
Editors’ Picks
With ‘Talking to Strangers,’ Malcolm Gladwell Goes Dark
Each of us has the responsibility to make this a habit. But those in positions of
responsibility have a special opportunity to expand inclusion and build societies
that truly need everyone.
Building such a society is no easy task. No ideology or political party holds all the
answers. Misguided thinking from all sides contributes to social exclusion, so
overcoming it will take innovative solutions from all sides. Indeed, what unites
the two of us in friendship and collaboration is not shared politics or the same
religion. It is something simpler: a shared belief in compassion, in human
dignity, in the intrinsic usefulness of every person to contribute positively for a
better and more meaningful world. The problems we face cut across conventional
categories; so must our dialogue, and our friendships.
Many are confused and frightened to see anger and frustration sweeping like
wildfire across societies that enjoy historic safety and prosperity. But their refusal
to be content with physical and material security actually reveals something
beautiful: a universal human hunger to be needed. Let us work together to build
a society that feeds this hunger.
++++++++++++
HOW TO OVERCOME
WORRY AND ANXIETY
WITH THIS SIMPLE
MINDFULNESS
TECHNIQUE
Are you an excessive worrier?
When worrying becomes excessive, it can lead to anxiety, panic and even
cause illness. When worried or anxious, your mind and body go into a
state of ‘fight or flight’ as you constantly focus on “what could happen.”
Chronic worrying (often referred to as anxiety) can affect your daily life
so much that it interferes with your work, appetite, relationships, sleep
and reduces your overall quality of life.
Many people who suffer from anxiety get caught in the cycle of addiction
in an unconscious attempt to control their inner turmoil.
They may over-eat, smoke, drink or take drugs in an attempt to get some
relief. In extreme cases, when worrying and anxiety go untreated, they
can lead to depressionand even suicidal thoughts.
WHAT IS THE TR UE CAUSE OF
A NX IET Y ?
Often we believe that the causes of our worries – our tensions and
anxieties – are from external things.
We may worry about whether we’ll have enough food on the table next
week; whether we’ll be able to find a relationship so we are not alone
when we get old; we may get anxious about our children, the stock
market, our job security or any number of other things. We see these
things as the cause of our worries.
How many times have you thought, “Oh, if only (fill in the blank) would
happen, if only I had (fill in the blank), I would be happy and have no
more worries!”
On closer investigation though, we can see that these external things –
the relationship, children, the stock market – are not truly the cause of
the negative emotional states of worry and anxiety.
Worries are caused not from the external circumstances of our lives, but
the internal ‘circumstances’. It is caused by our worrying thoughts.
R EC OGNIZE WORRY F OR WHAT
IT R EA L LY IS
Worry is not an externally caused condition. It is simply a particular
type of thought—pattern.
A ‘worry’ or ‘anxious’ thought occurs when the mind projects
itself into the future and imagines something going wrong.
What is the emotion generated by these types of thoughts or
mental movies? Fear.
You may use more ‘socially acceptable’ words like stress, anxiety or
worry but at the core of all these is fear. Though these imagined future
events are not happening in reality, you are still going through the
events in your mind.
Your mind cannot tell the difference between your imaginings and
reality, so the thoughts have almost the same impact on you as the
actual event would!
Chronic worry generates ongoing irritability, muscle tension,
concentration difficulties, indecision and agitation just as though you
were actually experiencing the things you’re worried about.
It results in you being “on edge” all the time and unable to relax (1).
Learn to recognize worry and anxiety for what they are. Thought
patterns. By doing so they begin to lose their power to ‘take you over’.
A WAY O F D E A L I N G W I TH
WORRY: L A B EL AND L ET GO
One technique for dealing with worry proposed by Dr. Christopher
Walsh is a technique he calls the “just worrying” labeling (2). It’s a very
simple technique: whenever you find yourself worrying about
something, note to yourself that you’re “just worrying.”
By doing this you become present as the witness of your thoughts
instead of being completely taken over by them. You now have the
power to choose to let it go.
After you label it, then turn your focus to your breathing or just simply
bring your attention into the present moment and what your doing.
Every time you catch yourself worrying—no matter how often—you
employ the technique again.
D ON’ T F IGHT THE F EEL ING
Whatever You Fight, You Strengthen, and What You Resist, Persists –
Eckhart Tolle
When using the “just worrying” technique, like any other mindfulness
exercise, it is important not to fight your feelings or thoughts. There is
no need to criticize yourself for feeling worries or anxiety or try to force
the thoughts out of your head. In short – avoid any struggle with the
thoughts. Struggling with thoughts is a bit like struggling in quicksand.
It only makes you sink deeper.
Instead of struggling with the thoughts, you can simply untangle from
your worry thoughts and view them objectively and calmly. By labelling
it “just a worry,” you immediately step back from the thought, stop the
struggle with what is happening, and recognize that the worry thoughts
are simply that – just thoughts. Not reality. In that moment of
realization you are no longer ‘stuck’ in your head and can bring your
focus back to the present moment.
You don’t need to waste energy fighting worry and anxiety, but you also
no longer need to ‘buy into it’ either. With this simple practice, you can
recognize unhelpful thoughts, label them “just worrying,” and move on
with your day in a state of ease and calm.
If you want to know how to overcome unhelpful thinking
permanently read this post on the four keys to overcoming negative
thinking for good (with free meditation audios).
Got some of your own wisdom to share on this topic? Questions? Jot
them in the comments section below.
Wishing you well,
Melli
1. http://www.webmd.com/balance/features/9-steps-to-end-chronic-
worrying
2. http://www.mindfulness.org.au/JUST%20WORRYING.htm
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
A great dharma talk on opening to fear and anxiety and how to work
with it in meditation practice.
You can remind yourself of the noble persons who have walked this
path before you. This path is no dusty byway. Buddhas from time
immemorial, the silent Buddhas, the great disciples, the arahants, all the
rest of the noble ones, all have walked here. If you want to share this
distinguished path, fortify yourself with dignity and be diligent. No room
for cowards or the lazy; this is a road for heroes and heroines.
You might say to yourself: “People of distinction have walked this path,
and I must try to live up to their company. I can’t be sloppy here. I shall
walk with as much care as possible, fearlessly. I have this chance to
belong to a great family, the group of distinguished people who walk on
this noble path. I should congratulate myself for having the opportunity
to do this. People like me have walked on this path and attained the
various stages of enlightenment. So I, too, will be able to reach the
same attainment”
Through such reflection, effort can arise and lead you to the goal of
nibbana (freedom).
~Sayadaw U Pandita
Transcript:
The path of Dharma practice is the path of opening. It’s the path of
opening our bodies. And we start in our practice as often the sense of
the solidity of the body. The density of it. Through the power of
observation, we begin to see more specific kinds of sensations. Begin to
discriminate and articulate different kinds of feelings in the body. As the
observing power becomes stronger, often there’s a disillusion of the
form. So we can be sitting and feeling the body, but without any sense
of shape or form, as we go deeper, we begin to feel it as a flow of
energy. The energy becomes more refined and more subtle.
And as practice goes on, maybe we’re a little more with the breath, and
thought some more in the background. Then the background thought
gets more subtle. Maybe for a moment or two, they actually stop, and
you really experience a silence of mind.
The practice of Dharma is not a reaching out for anything. It’s not a
process of acquisition. Rather, it’s a settling back and an opening to
what is there. An opening to what is true. So realization of our essential
nature of what is always there. What keeps us closed in this process of
opening or keeps us closed to this experience of the Dharma, are
deeply conditioned fears or certain kinds of fear in the mind, which are
very strongly habituated. We have fear of pain. This is a strong habit for
us. We have of certain emotional or psychological state. There’s often
fear of impermanence in some very basic level. Mind is afraid of change
or afraid of the unknown. This fear of death.
The problem for us is that all of these things are actually part of who we
are– pain and difficult emotions, and impermanence, and the unknown,
and death. This is part of what is true. And so as long as there is fear of
these things, we stay fragmented. We stay cut-off a part of ourselves.
On this journey of opening, what happens is that we come to
boundaries. We come to the edges of what we’re willing to be with. Of
what we’re comfortable with. And it’s just at these edges, these
boundaries that these deep-rooted fears begin to reveal themselves.
Working with the fear at this point in our practice is an essential part of
the work that we do. The essential part of this opening. We begin to see
very clearly what it is that limits us. We begin to see the possibility of
going beyond our limits. We begin to look very directly and very closely
at the nature of fear itself. So that we understand it. The Dharma is the
totality of ourselves. The totality of who we are. And there’s one
profound implication of this understanding—which is that everything is
workable. Every situation, every experience is workable. Nothing is
outside of the practice.
So what are some of the things, what are the areas, in which fear is
strongly conditioned? Some way, the most obvious, the most present
domain of experience where fear begins to show itself is fear of pain,
fear of discomfort. The mind has been strongly conditioned to avoid
unpleasantness. We don’t like feeling painful sensations. There’s often
an unwillingness to be uncomfortable.