There are a few things you come to realize when you wake up knowing chronic anxiety is part of your everyday life. You soon realize that you will never be like them again. By them, I mean people who seem “normal” who have never had it out with anxiety or fear. You will always have an intimate knowledge of what it means to live in fear. You come to realize that fear means something different to you than it does to them. It is at this point you will be faced with a choice. You can pray asking God to make it go away, you can dig into the fight against fear, or you can give in to living a life of fear. If you are like me, none of these choices seem like good ones.
Options when dealing with fear:
- (A) Pray to God He will Make it go away
- (B) Fight against the fear
- (C) Give in to fear
- (D)) None of the above
If you were to ask me which one I would choose, it would have to be “None of the above.”
I believe I may have thought about praying for God to make it go away, but this was never really a choice for me. When originally faced with the choice, my faith was not in a place where I could pray this kind of prayer.
Very Few Will Understand
Doctors, friends, and family members will most likely be at a loss when it comes to giving you advice in this area. Unless they have personally battled with fear or anxiety, they will largely be unable to understand. Most likely you will be able to tell if they get it or not. Know this though, as much as they want to help you, they will disappoint you. Perhaps the best thing they can do is with love, compassionately admit they do not understand.
If you are anything like I was, this leaves the options “Fight against the fear” or “Give in to fear.” Here is where I choose “None of the above.” Many kind people will encourage you to just accept your condition or accept that chronic fear is a permanent part of your life. They do this with great intentions, but they do not truly understand what they are asking you to do. They do not understand, that for you fear does not stand still, it only gets worse or gets better. There is no in between when it comes to fear.
So, here we are…I am not about to just “give in to fear” or “accept my condition.” This leaves me with the choice to “Fight against the fear.”
What does it really mean to fight against the fear?
*Original Photo by Camila Quintero Franco on Unsplash