Creative
Ways to Transform Challenges:
Dealing
With Feelings
On Becoming
Fearless
Arianna
Huffington
Introduction
I
remember in February 1997 taking my then seven-and five-year- old daughters to
an exhibition of Shakespeare's "Unruly Women" at the Folger
Shakespeare Library in Washington.
There was Portia in The Merchant of Venice, who takes on the whole Venetian
legal world and uses the law to bring new, deeper insights to it. There was
Beatrice in Much Ado About Nothing, and Rosalind in As You Like It, both of them
"take no prisoners" women who ruffled the feathers of those birdbrains
mindlessly parroting the status quo. Fearless women come in all shapes, forms,
ages, and professions. As Shakespeare put it, "Age cannot wither her, nor custom
stale her infinite variety."
I
wanted to take my daughters to that exhibition because it's never too early to
teach women fearlessness. But now as I watch my girls in their teenage years,
I'm stunned to see all the same classic fears I was burdened with: How
attractive am I? Do people like me? Should I speak up? I wonder if their fears
are more intense than mine were at their age or if they just seem more intense.
I had thought that with all the gains feminism has brought, my daughters would
not have to suffer through the fears I did. Yet here is our younger generation,
as uncertain, doubting, and desperate as we were, trying to fulfill the
expectations of others. What happened to our bold little girls?
As
Mary Pipher puts it in her bestselling book Reviving
Ophelia: Saving the Selves of Adolescent Girls, "Something dramatic happens to
girls in early adolescence. Just as planes and ships disappear mysteriously into
the Bermuda Triangle, so do the selves of girls go down in droves." Fears in
teenage girls manifest in many ways: depression, eating disorders,
drugs, casual and confusing sex. Young women, fixated
on looks, thinness, and sexuality, are losing themselves in trying to gain
approval from peers, grown-ups, and the overheated pop culture that surrounds
them.
And
yet, through the many case studies I've read, through the stories of women I
admire, and, above all, through my own experience with my daughters, again and
again I encounter moments of extraordinary strength, courage, and resilience,
when fears are confronted, even overcome, and anything seems possible. It was my
longing to somehow make these moments last that prompted me to write this book -
for my contemporaries, for our mothers, for our daughters.
Clinical Anxiety Disorders associated with fear affect more than 20 million
Americans. Science has shown that fear is hardwired deep in our lizard brain.
What differentiates us from one another are the
situations that activate our individual alarms of danger. An armed burglar
invading our home? A boyfriend not calling? An odd comment from a friend over
lunch? An upcoming wedding toast you're expected to give? Starting a new job?
Having to ask your boss for a raise? Saying good-bye to a bad relationship?
Fears
- such as fear of snakes, heights, and closed spaces - are not biologically
specific to gender, but some do tend to be more prevalent among women than men,
including anuptaphobia: fear of staying single;
arrhenphobia: fear of men;
atelophobia: fear of imperfection; atychiphobia:
fear of failure; cacophobia: fear of ugliness;
eremophobia: fear of loneliness;
gerascophobia: fear of growing old;
glossophobia: fear of public speaking;
katagelophobia: fear of ridicule; monophobia: fear
of being alone; rhytiphobia: fear of getting
wrinkles.Every fear has a name. Whatever it is that
frightens you has frightened someone before you. Fear is universal. It touches
everyone - but it clearly doesn't stop everyone.
My Own Battles With Fear
There
have been many, many moments of fear in my life, but seven of them were critical
- times when the fear was overwhelming but which taught me that it was possible
to break through to the other side. To fearlessness.
The
first experience of fear I remember was a particularly strange one. I was nine
years old. Over dinner one night, my mother started telling my younger sister
and me about the time during the Greek civil war, in the 1940s, when she fled to
the mountains with two Jewish girls. As part of the Greek Red Cross, she was
taking care of wounded soldiers and hiding the girls.
She
described the night when German soldiers arrived at their cabin and started to
shoot, threatening to kill everyone if the group did not surrender the Jews the
Germans suspected (rightly) they were hiding. My mother, who spoke fluent
German, stood up and told them categorically to put down their guns, that there
were no Jews in their midst. And then she watched the German soldiers lower
their guns and walk away. And just hearing it, I remember the fear rising inside
me, not just fear for my mother and the danger she faced but fear for myself.
How would I ever live up to this standard of fearlessness?
It was
1967, and a group of Greek generals had just staged a coup and established a
dictatorship in Athens,
where I lived. There was a curfew, and soldiers were stationed at every corner.
I was seventeen years old and afraid - torn between the fear that paralyzed me
and the desire to ignore the curfew and walk to my economics class so I could
fulfill my dream of going to
Cambridge
University. I ignored the
curfew and walked to class.
When I
finally got into
Cambridge, I
instantly fell in love with the Cambridge Union, the university's famed debating
society. But, to put it mildly, the Cambridge Union did not instantly fall in
love with me. Even before starting my unrequited love affair, I had to overcome
the barrier of having a heavy Greek accent in a world where accents really
mattered. More important, I had to overcome the fear of criticism and ridicule.
If I didn't, I knew I would never be able to speak fearlessly in public.
In
1988, when I published my book on Picasso, I found myself in a battle with the
art establishment. My sin was that I had dared criticize Picasso as a man, even
while acknowledging his artistic genius. The book was called Picasso: Creator
and Destroyer, and the art world would not forgive me for exploring the
destroyer part - a not inconsiderable facet of Picasso's life. And this, after
all, was a biography. My Picasso experience elicited two fears: the fear of
being disapproved of by people I liked and respected, and the fear of being
caught up in a public controversy.
The
most heart-wrenching fear - confronting the possibility of great loss and one's
own powerlessness to do anything to stop it - hit me when my younger daughter,
Isabella, was not yet one year old. One night, completely unexpectedly, she had
a fever-related seizure. I was alone with her. Seeing my baby turn black and
blue and realizing she was unable to breathe brought me face-to-face with a
chilling fear.
In
2003, I ran for governor in California.
During the campaign I was confronted with the fear of being caricatured and
misunderstood. Of course, it's in the nature of political campaigns to turn your
opponent into a political caricature. But I saw firsthand how different - and
how much harder - it is if you're a woman, how much more exposed and vulnerable
you feel. I remember sitting at the airport, waiting for a plane to Sacramento,
deep in thought about all of this, when a young woman put a note in my hand and
then disappeared: Ms.
Huffington,
I didn't want to intrude, but I wanted to thank you for your
statements during the September 24th debate. You helped make it clear why women
in particular should not vote for Schwarzenegger. While some have complained
that your behavior was inappropriate, I realize that well-behaved women rarely
make history. Thanks for taking on the fight.
Janice
Rocco
My
mother, who lived with me most of my life - through my marriage, childbirth, and
divorce - died in 2000. Her death forced me to confront my deepest fear: living
my life without the person who had been its foundation. I did lose her, and I
have had to go on without her. But the way she lived her life and faced her
death have taught me so much about overcoming fear.
How Fear Limits us
Beyond
the major moments of fear in our lives, there are many other times we sacrifice
our personal truth to go along, be approved of, or just plain be "nice." Because
despite all our advances, there's still a huge premium on women being
"accommodating" and "team players" who don't "rock the boat." As
Marlo Thomas once said, "A man has to be Joe
McCarthy to be called ruthless. All a woman has to do is put you on hold." Or,
as a friend of mine operating in the treacherous political world of
Washington's Beltway told me, "It's good to be a team
player, but you also have to know the difference between all of us standing
together and all of us jumping off the same cliff." If you let them, the hungry
little gremlins of compromise will devour your soul bit by bit and come to
dominate your life. They feed the fear of being left out, the fear that survival
will be impossible outside the tribe. No wonder fear shoots through our veins,
constricting our blood flow and shutting down our creative energy - we are in
survival mode.
When
we are in the grip of survival thinking, the dominant illusion is that once we
vanquish the enemy facing us, overcome the obstacle in front of us, get over the
next hill, life will be secure, free of problems, perfect. Then we will be
fearless. Then we can start the life we've been planning on. But that
long-awaited day never comes because there is always another enemy, another
obstacle, another hill.
To
live in fear is the worst form of insult to our true selves. By having such a
low regard for who we are - for our instincts and abilities and worth - we build
a cage around ourselves. To prevent others from shutting us down, we do it for
them. Trapped by our own fears, we then pretend that we're incapable of having
what we want, forever waiting for others to give us permission to start living.
Pretty soon, we start to believe this is the only way.
The
most common response to this crisis of self is conformity: "The individual,"
Erich Fromm writes in Escape from Freedom, "ceases
to be himself; he adopts entirely the kind of personality offered to him by
cultural patterns; and he therefore becomes exactly as all others are and as
they expect him to be. . . . This mechanism can be compared with the protective
coloring some animals assume." So, ironically, the woman who appears well
adapted may be the one who has simply become most comfortable being governed by
her fears, while the "neurotic" one is still gamely struggling to reach
fearlessness.
Mastering Fear
Fearlessness is not the absence of fear. Rather, it's the mastery of fear.
Courage, my compatriot Socrates argues, is the knowledge of what is not to be
feared. Which is to say, there are things we should be
afraid of - we want to stay alive, after all. We will never completely
eliminate fear from our lives, but we can definitely get to the point where our
fears do not stop us from daring to think new thoughts, try new things, take
risks, fail, start again, and be happy.
Fearlessness is about getting up one more time than we fall down. The more
comfortable we are with the possibility of falling down, the less worried we are
of what people will think if and when we do, the less judgmental of ourselves we
are every time we make a mistake, the more fearless we will be, and the easier
our journey will become.
I
remember once talking to my eight-year-old daughter before a school performance.
She kept saying she had butterflies in her stomach because she was afraid to go
on the stage. What if, I asked her, the butterflies were actually there because
she was excited to go on the stage? She considered the idea. In fact, it became
a little joke between us. "I'm not afraid, Mommy," she would say. "I'm excited."
The more she repeated it, the more she believed it and the less afraid she was.
Since fear is such a primal reaction, making the choice to move forward despite
fear is an evolved decision that transcends our animal nature….
I have
my own key to overcoming fear. I look for the still center in my life and in my
self, the place that is not susceptible to life's constant ups and downs. It
doesn't mean that I don't lose my head and that I wouldn't rather have success
and praise than failure and criticism, but it does mean that I can find my way
back to that center, that secure structure of inner support, so that all my
negative emotions, and especially my fears, become opportunities to achieve
fearlessness. If we can find that greater inner freedom and strength, then we
can evolve from a fearful state of living to a state of freedom, trust, and
happiness.
We
have so much potential, yet we hold ourselves back. If my daughters, and women
of all ages, are to take their rightful place in society, they must become
fearless. This book is dedicated to them and to that goal.
Excerpted from the book On Becoming Fearless, Copyright © 2006 by
Arianna Huffington,
Reprinted with permission of the publisher Hachette Book Group USA.
www.hachettebookgroupusa.com.
Arianna
Huffington has written eleven books, appeared on
numerous television and radio shows, and launched the
Huffington Post, an enormously successful source of
news and opinion. In 2006, she was named by Time
magazine as one of the most influential people in the world.
Arianna Huffington can
be contacted at info@huffingtonpost.com
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© 2000-2007
Life Challenges
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