
Our job as penal practitioners is to meet the challenges what
are in front of us inside large jails or prisons without complications. We have
to learn how to react according to our training and experience and set aside or
minimize the fear of harm, failure or even guilt for doing a most difficult job
under difficult conditions. The more we accept fear as being a natural part of
our job the stronger we get. However, in doing so, we must make sure we have
the right mindset, tools and approach to do this safely and effectively.
Certainly I am not proposing you meet fear directly in a
reckless manner especially when it may be dangerous to do so or too
overwhelming to conquer. What we need to do is fight the fear with calmness and
understanding that it can be controlled through the mind if you allow the mind
to engage with each deep breath you take conditioning your calmness along the
way. The calmer you are, the less fear you have. Remaining calm will keep you
from becoming controlled by the grips of fear. The calmer you are the more fear
loses it power over you. It should not be your intention to get rid of your fear
but rather to subdue it to a point of self-control and explore it and
understand it better. Seeking such resolution creates a practice that brings
confidence to the forefront and lessens the emotions associated with fear such
as anger, embarrassment, dissuasion or guilt.
Hence we reduce the dominance of fear within ourselves that allows us to
function near normal in getting things done.
The symptoms of fear are common. There may be butterflies or
twisted pain in the stomach feelings, sweating or rapid breathing along with a
sense of vulnerability to pain or other emotional sensations. The main thing is
to focus on your ability to remain calm and breathe deep while undergoing the
discomfort fear brings to you and your body. Much of the tension, tightness and
constriction will begin to unravel as you control your self-awareness through
self-control.
Certain kinds of wisdom arise only through seeing something
happen repeatedly. Commonly referred to as lessons learned we often have to
become very familiar with something in order to be free of fear. I found this
to be the case with worrying as I seem to worry more about something or someone
when I saw others around me worry validating my own fear through the eyes and
thoughts of others. Had I questioned their fear I would have taken some power
away from my own fear as I realized that it may have been worrisome at one
point but not all the time.
Go back and investigate the fear when things are passive
around you and reflect what has happened or occurred and validate its origin or
significance. Trust develops, not from willing ourselves to trust, but from
discovering for ourselves that we can learn our experience and not over-
whelmed by it. If you investigate fear you will reduce it.
Source: https://www.myptsd.com/c/threads/working-with-fear.13790/
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