05-10-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ
Seneca wrote nearly two thousand years ago that we suffer more in imagination than in reality. The older I get, the more I understand what he meant. Fear has a way of expanding itself inside the mind long before anything has actually happened. A difficult conversation becomes a catastrophe. Rejection becomes ruin. Uncertainty becomes proof that everything is about to collapse. Over time, I started noticing something even deeper underneath that fear. Most of us are not only afraid of painful things happening. We are afraid of who we might become if they do. We quietly wonder whether we are strong enough to survive heartbreak, grief, humiliation, disappointment, or loss without permanently unraveling.
That belief hides inside more of our decisions than we realize. It shows up when we pull away before someone can reject us. It shows up when we keep conversations shallow because vulnerability feels dangerous. It appears in overthinking, perfectionism, emotional distance, and the constant need to prepare for every possible outcome before life has even unfolded. For years, I believed sensitivity was my problem. I had heard versions of that my entire life. Too emotional. Too affected. Too deeply impacted by things other people seemed to move through easily. Eventually, I started treating my emotions like liabilities that needed to be controlled before they embarrassed me or broke me.
What I understand now is that sensitivity was never the issue. The real issue was trust. I did not trust my ability to survive difficult emotions once they fully arrived. Somewhere along the way, I developed the belief that certain experiences would destroy me emotionally in a way I would never recover from. I could not always explain that fear clearly, though it shaped everything. Most people do not consciously say to themselves, “I do not think I can cope.” Instead, they organize their lives around avoiding the possibility of finding out. Avoidance becomes protection. Distance becomes safety. Emotional control becomes survival.
The problem is that avoidance never actually allows the belief to be challenged. When you constantly escape discomfort before fully experiencing it, your mind never gets evidence that you are capable of surviving it. The fear stays alive because it is never tested. Every avoided conversation, every emotional retreat, every attempt to outrun uncertainty quietly reinforces the same message: this feeling would have destroyed me if I stayed. That belief becomes stronger with repetition. Psychologist Susan David has written extensively about emotional avoidance and the ways people begin treating emotions like threats instead of experiences. Once that pattern takes hold, life slowly becomes smaller. You stop moving freely through the world and begin managing it instead.
What changed my perspective was realizing that confidence is not built by avoiding pain. It is built by moving through pain and discovering that you are still standing afterward. That sounds simple until you actually try to do it. Many people grew up in environments where strong emotions were treated as weakness, inconvenience, or instability. Some learned early that vulnerability created danger instead of connection. In those situations, emotional self protection was not irrational. It was adaptive. The nervous system learned to brace because bracing once made sense. The mind keeps carrying those old lessons long after the environment has changed.
Neuroscientist Lisa Feldman Barrett describes emotions as predictions the brain makes based on previous experience. In other words, the mind is constantly trying to protect you using old information. Fear often comes from memory pretending to be prophecy. Healing did not begin for me when I became fearless. It began when I slowly gathered evidence that I could survive feelings I once believed would destroy me. I learned that grief does not erase you. Rejection does not end you. Uncertainty does not mean you are incapable. Pain can move through you without defining you forever.
Most of us are still living from emotional stories written years ago by younger versions of ourselves who had fewer resources, less perspective, and far less support than we have now. Those beliefs may have protected us once, though protection and truth are not always the same thing. Life guarantees that difficult things will happen eventually. The better question is not “What if something goes wrong?” but “Why do I assume I will not survive it?” When I look honestly at my own life, the evidence tells a very different story. Every difficult season I thought would break me permanently eventually became something I carried, adapted to, learned from, or survived. Sometimes imperfectly. Sometimes slowly. Sometimes with scars that never fully disappeared. Yet I survived them all.
There will always be uncertainty. There will always be moments where life feels too heavy, too unpredictable, or too painful to navigate confidently. Strength is not the absence of fear in those moments. Strength is learning to trust yourself enough to move through them anyway. The goal is not becoming emotionless. The goal is becoming someone who no longer mistakes feeling deeply for being weak. You are far more capable than your fear has convinced you that you are.
.
.