Comfort is Fear in Disguise

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All men’s miseries derive from not being able to sit in a quiet room alone.

Blaise Pascal

I recently had an epiphany I want to share with you.

 

As I mentioned in my blog post last week I recently attended a several day long retreat geared towards people seeking early financial independence.  I was listening to one of the excellent presentations in a small breakout session. Towards the end of the presentation we were discussing doubt and anxiety and how to move past them when we are faced with challenging situations.

 

There was a discussion of expecting these emotions and accepting them when they arose, and how to manage them when they inevitably came. To be honest I was a little distracted and tired from the little amount of sleep I got the night before and I was a bit unfocused at this point. Everything made sense, but don’t know if it was really sinking in.

 

There was a brief pause and a woman siting to my left raised her hand.

 

In a quiet voice she suggested when we got stuck in life and had difficulty moving forward we ask the following question:

 

‘What would I do if I wasn’t afraid?’

 

For some reason this really caught my attention. It sounds like an innocent enough phrase, but it struck a nerve that I couldn’t quite put a finger on until a few days later.

 

What would I do if I wasn’t afraid?

 

I kept repeating the question in my head, trying to figure out why it bothered me so much.

 

Notice the question didn’t ask if I was afraid, it already assumed I was.

 

It is actually a very subtly aggressive question.

 

But the question was right about me.

 

Like most people many of my actions are rooted in fear.

 

Many decisions I am making in my life are because I am afraid – afraid of failing, afraid of having regret, afraid of not being accepted, afraid of losing something or someone I loved, etc.

 

Only I didn’t realize this until it was verbalized.

 

What would I do if I wasn’t afraid?

 

Bam! It was a swift gut punch that took me by surprise.

 

You see I pride myself on being a pretty enlightened dude. I like to imagine myself as a much improved version of me from 5 or 10 years ago; and I am in any ways. I am much happier, much freer and much more content. After all I’m the Happy freaking Philosopher!

 

Me v2.0.

 

In fact, that is my primary motivation for this blog, to share with you my ideas on improving happiness and freedom.

 

…but I’m still afraid at times.

 

Maybe more than I would like to admit.

 

This is not an easy pill to swallow.

 

I’m not sure we can really completely control our emotions. Influence them yes, but fear is something so primal, so basic to what we are. It just seems to bubble up from somewhere and take over. When we see the coiled up snake 3 feet from us or we hear that strange noise from the kitchen late at night the fear hits us before our brain even starts conscious processing. Maybe we can train ourselves to be less fearful, but it is extremely hard to just turn off fear. It is hard to shift these primitive ingrained thought patterns.

 

So what should we do? What can we do?

 

As I tried to wrap my arms around this dilemma I realized we can’t really talk about fear without mentioning the framework of mindset.

 

Stepping back from the primitive fight or flight fears, our mindset primarily determines our fear, not the actual facts of the situation. The exact same scenario can cause paralyzing fear, exhilaration or disgust in someone depending on their mindset.

 

Let’s examine the framework a common mindset dichotomy: scarcity vs. abundance.

 

The topic is more complex than I will discuss here, but in general when we feel things are scarce we have fear of losing them.

 

When we feel things are abundant we always know there will be more. We do not fear this loss because we can always acquire more.

 

I think most of us are wired to varying degrees of the scarcity mindset. This is why horrifying reality television shows like this exist.

The disconnect presents when intellectually we know we need to switch our thinking to abundance, but emotionally we are stuck in scarcity mode.

 

Let’s stay with scarcity for a moment. I think a good starting point is to reframe the way we think about scarcity and recognize what is actually scarce in our lives. This may help us at least redirect that fear to something more appropriate. For most of us it is not material items or money that is scarce. All of us living a first world middle class or above existence live in material excess – massive abundance.

 

Money in excess of our basic needs may not bring us more happiness anyways, even though we convince ourselves that it must.

 

But we all have scarcity of time, and many of us have a scarcity of friendship, love and fulfillment. If we are going to remain in this fixed scarcity mindset, then at least we should know what is truly scarce. The problem is we usually don’t have this fear until it is too late.

 

 

Comfort

It may seem strange to relate fear and comfort together, but they are really two sides of the same coin in an odd way. We seek comfort to avoid the opposite, which is discomfort. We fear the things that bring us discomfort. Comfort is soothing, discomfort provokes anxiety.

 

We cover up fear with comfort. Comfort is fear in disguise.

 

I convinced myself how comfortable and easy things were in my life in order to avoid facing the fear. My lifestyle, my job, my routines – much is comfortably on autopilot.

 

And I don’t challenge the comfort primarily because of the fear.

 

But we cannot live our lives to their potential when fear and comfort prevail. We stay in a narrow band of experience. Fear and comfort hide what is truly wonderful about our short stay here on planet earth.

 

Ironically I can see this in others much easier than I can see it for myself. It is a blind spot for me, and I assume this is likely true for you as well.

 

After I recognized this in myself I started noticing the fearlessness of those around me. It was an aura that was unmistakable and now that I understood it I wanted to have it. I needed it.

 

I felt like I was in a video game and people were walking around with little blue bars of fearlessness next to their faces. I could see how much they had. I couldn’t see my own of course, but I sensed it was average at best or near empty at worst.

 

In the context of financial independence (which was the theme of this retreat) fear often manifests in the form of being afraid to start saving and the fear of missing out and fear of deprivation by frugality. This was not an issue for me; in fact I had quite an uncanny ability to not be afraid by these things. In me the fear was failing at some point in the future; not saving enough, making a bad investment, starting a business that failed, etc.

 

I was allowing my situation to fall into routine comfort mode, but it was not comfort I was running to. It was fear that I was covering up and running away from.

 

This comfort of mine was just an elaborate rationalization and a few conversations I had at this retreat exposed this truth. It was a little uncomfortable, like falling on a scab that’s almost healed and ripping it off again.

 

Luckily I’m a quick healer.

 

The seduction is that comfort does feel nice, so it seems like we are doing OK. I can look around and see people less comfortable, less lucky than myself, and because the human brain is so terrible at seeing absolutes it says:

 

‘Look at all those people who are struggling more than you, this means you are doing great and should change nothing! Well done you genius philosopher you!’

 

The problem with this narrative is it may not always be true, and if it is true, it’s not true for reasons that matter or are relevant.

 

Someday I will learn that the voice in my head really has very little useful to say.

 

Nobody else’s happiness or success matters. Nobody else’s material comforts matter. Comparison does not matter. It only matters to you if you allow it to. We do have the capability to filter out this nonsense, although it does not come naturally to us.

 

 

The unknown

I wonder if at the heart of it all is my fear of the unknown. As I strip away all distractions maybe I’m most fearful of what will be there. Will there we anything left that’s worthwhile? Maybe this is the subconscious existential dilemma that keeps us going on comfortable autopilot much longer than necessary.

When we purge our biggest distractions (work and career being the largest for most people) and start the deep decluttering of our lives we are forced to look at ourselves and face our real fear, the fear of not being enough.

 

Am I enough?

 

I hope so…

 

But I will never find out until I face those demons.

 

Someday.

 

To be continued…

11 comments

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  1. The question “what would I do if I wasn’t afraid?” has helped me change jobs and try new things, but I don’t ask it often enough. There is definitely something compelling about it. I have enough anxiety, however, that I am not shocked by being afraid. I just accept it and try to let it go.

    For years I had a different question, which was, “what would I be willing to change if I was extremely depressed and desperate (i.e. suicidal)?” but that was coming from a position of deep.daily discomfort, not comfort, and the sensation that something has to change or else. The answer had to be, “pretty much everything.”

    I always thought it was freeing to imagine packing up, moving across the country and living out of a suitcase or something while learning a new job. I think the takeaway in that line of thought is that it helps to remember everything you do, including the the things you do every day and with which you are overly familiar, are a choice. Even when you feel stuck, there are other options available. The other options may not be apparent or even better, but they are there.

    1. Great observations. Discomfort or pain is probably the best motivator because we do anything to avoid it. It produces the big shifts. When we get comfortable I see it as more of a holding pattern. When I wrote this I realized that and saw it in myself. We can be fearful to act because we remember the discomfort and don’t want to return to it…so we do nothing. Comfort can be a prison, albeit a very comfortable one 🙂

      • wendy on July 29, 2017 at 5:26 pm
      • Reply

      I have actually packed up, moved cross country and lived out of (two) suitcases several times for new jobs.
      All the other ‘stuff’ was packed up and stored for a month or so… and once even for six months. You REALLY figure out how little is needed to go about your day when all your stuff is packed away where you can’t get to it.
      It is scary and freeing and exhilarating all at once!

      Even knowing that, unfortunately I’ve let ‘stuff’ creep back into my life and I’m trying to declutter/purge again….when you have daydreams about how streamlined/low maintenance/peaceful your life would be if all your stuff fell into a sinkhole or collapsed in an earthquake (not to make light of that for when it does happen to people) you know you need to downsize the extraneous.

      I’ve also found that if you change your mindset from ‘fear of the unknown’ to excitement, it’s a lot easier and more fun. It’s also easier with practice…having now relocated multiple times, through multiple states, for new jobs – not knowing anyone or the area – I actually look forward to the thrill of the unknown.

    • Joe (arebelspy) on June 12, 2016 at 7:30 am
    • Reply

    For me, comfort is laziness in disguise.

    1. Haha, I can see that. I think it is very dependent on personality and mindset. Fear largely melts away in people with a strong abundance mindset (at least in some ways).

  2. Oh this so resonated with me, especially ‘We cover up fear with comfort. Comfort is fear in disguise’
    In the scarcity mindset, there is a fear of missing out, fear of being uncomfortable but in the abundance mindset a different type of fear can be motivating: fear of not being able to live the life you want, fear of being controlled by someone/something else.
    I’m trying to let the abundance mindset dominate, thanks for the reminder.

    1. I agree, fear can manifest itself in so many ways. What surprised me was how subversive and hidden it can be at times. It’s easier to deal with when it’s out in the open and we can wrap our arms around it. When it hides behind other emotions and mental states it’s much more difficult.

  3. I love the Pascal quote. You really hit the nail square on this post. Fear destroys so much happiness in life and comfort is the delusion we use to convince ourselves otherwise.

    1. Thank you Keith. Well said.

  4. Very nicely written. This rings very true for me. I KNOW that I favor comfort of the known over the discomfort of the unknown. It really is just discomfort, something that takes a bit of effort that sometimes I just don’t have the energy for.

    1. I think that is a key point, it takes energy to break out from comfort and sometimes we just don’t have it. We have to train ourselves to be a little uncomfortable.

  1. […] favorite post this week comes from The Happy Philosopher who writes that comfort is nothing more than fear in disguise. That’s […]

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