When I’m Afraid, I Fall

Person standing on top of cliffMy husband, Edwin, and son, Forest, are rock climbers and very hardy mountain climbers and hikers. I’m a hiker and occasional rock climber, too, but there’s a big difference between us. Edwin and Forest are fearless. They walk right up to cliff edges, leap over crevasses, and sprint across logs high over rocky streams. I lie on my belly near cliff edges, climb down, across, and back up crevasses, and crawl over those same logs. I also fall and slip far more often than they.

I can’t explain my more frequent falls by carelessness, since I’m the epitome of careful. I could chalk my falls up to being less coordinated, but since I was a gymnast, specializing in the balance beam, and have been a dancer since childhood, lack of coordination isn’t the problem.

I fall more because I’m afraid. When I’m confident and unafraid, I hike and climb well, smoothly, and without mishap, just like they do.

What does this have to do with MOGO? When we are afraid, we may decline the adventure of making choices that do the most good and the least harm because we may worry we will be different, inconvenienced, less secure, or isolated from friends, family, neighbors, or religious communities. And when we fear, we may fall off the MOGO path that asks us to inquire about the effects of our choices, introspect, and live with integrity. “Not worth it,” we might say, fearful.

So how do we become unafraid?

We choose to be courageous.

Courage is not the same as fearlessness. Courage is when we do something despite our fear. I think I’m much more courageous than Edwin and Forest when it comes to rock climbing because I’m often terrified, and I climb anyway. They don’t need courage because they’re not afraid. Initially, this courage doesn’t keep me from slipping or falling, since fear still makes me unsteady. What courage does is slowly but surely supplant fear with confidence as I slip and survive, as I fall and get up again, as I reach a peak and feel euphoric.

When we courageously choose MOGO, we discover that new choices bring unexpected benefits. We make new friends, create exciting, supportive new communities, deepen our sense of self respect and inner peace, discover more joy, and often greater health. And one day we realize we’re no longer afraid.

~ Zoe


2 Responses

  1. Yes, I understand. That is very wise. Thank you.

  2. Martin Luther King Jr. said

    “Darkness cannot drive out darkness;
    only light can do that.
    Hate cannot drive out hate;
    only love can do that.
    Hate multiplies hate, violence multiplies violence,
    and toughness multiplies toughness
    in a descending spiral of destruction.”

    The Light exists because you are choosing to be the light.
    The hope exists because you are choosing to be the hope.
    The faith exists because you are choosing to be the faith.
    The promise of peace exists because you are choosing to be the promise of peace.
    The peace exists because you are choosing to be the peace.

    There is nothing to be afraid of. There are unseen powers in this universe which work in favor of good at all times. And nothing, absolutely nothing, can harm a truly righteous person. Even when it seems that harm has been done, there is a rhyme and a reason, and ultimately good will triumph. Do not be afraid. Just put your faith in the invisible powers which dictate this universe and do what you know is right in your heart, and then everything else will fall into place automatically. [Upright one angle of a square and the other sides will be automatically right - Gandhi]

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