Six Steps to Master Fear of Failure

    Alpinist - Silhouette at dawnWhat irrational fears are getting in the way of your work? Your relationships? Your family?

    Irrational fears are the rational interpretation of the false stories we make up and then believe ― something we’ve all done. While rational fears protect you. Irrational fears limit you and can even be paralyzing.

    Here are the six simple but powerful steps from the book, “Fearless Leaders,”  to help you gain freedom from irrational fears of failure that keep you from fully experiencing success and happiness.

    Step 1: Identify your fear. Write down what you’re afraid you’ll fail at.

    Step 2: Embrace your fear. Gently embrace it; imagine it. What does it look like? What might it sound like? Does it have a name? Remember, you created this fear and continue to create it, so you developed this fear for a reason. Its original purpose was to protect you, but now it’s holding you back. Acknowledge your fear and then begin to release it with deep appreciation.

    Step 3: Disidentify. Be free of your fear. Fear of failure is not you. Your fearful thoughts created an emotion, but you’re not your thoughts or your emotions. Use the image you created in Step 2 to understand that your fear is not you. See, feel or hear your fear leaving you, moving behind you and becoming smaller and weaker until it disappears. Let it know you’re safe without it. Time to let it go with kindness; it’s not you!

    Step 4: Identify your worst-case scenario. Describe it in detail.

    Step 5: Do a reality check. Now that you have identified your worst-case scenario, how probable is it that this worst case will come true? It’s sometimes useful to use a zero to 100 percent scale, where zero is no possibility and 100 percent is a certainty. Answer the question from pure logic in the present, not from emotion or past experiences.

    Can you accept the probability? Decide if you can accept the level of probability that your worst case will happen. If you can’t accept the level of probability,then you’ll need to do something to change the situation or level of risk. For example, you want to implement an unproven strategy, but if it fails, you will lose your job and put the whole company at risk. In this case, the probability is too high to accept. You will either need to modify the strategy or drop it. Set it aside. If the probability is acceptable and you also accepted the potential of the worst-case scenario, let yourself come to peace with it and set it aside.

    Step 6: Create a fearless – free from fear focus.
    • Imagine your life if you were in control of your fear. How would you sit, walk and move about? Can you imagine what it might feel like to confront the challenges that used to hold you back? Can you hear how you would speak if you were free from your fear?
    • As you experience this, imagine focusing on being successful in attaining what you have been afraid to fail at. Focus on the thoughts, feelings and actions most associated with being successful.
    • Now, with your fear not holding you back, take action toward creating your best-case scenario.

    Repeat these steps until you have mastered your fear. Mastery does not mean you are without fear; it means you control your fear – it doesn’t control you.

    If you don’t control fear, fear controls you.