Fears - Current or Conquered

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TheColdHeart

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Sep 15, 2008
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I used to be really badly claustrophobic/scared of being trapped in something. It started after I got stuck in a lift when I was a kid and for years I would take 10 flights of stairs instead of a 30 second lift journey. Then a few years later I got stuck in a toilet cubicle when the handle came off and there was no way to get it open from the inside.
At it's 'worst' I wouldn't go in rooms without windows, underground or places where I couldn't always see an exit.

Eventually I just made myself get over it bit by bit. I still won't get in a lift alone and I always, always check a room I'm not sure of has a working door handle on the other side before I close it properly.

I'm also not wild about walking in the sea when the sediment stops you seeing the floor. I just have a fear of stepping on something I can't see like crabs or sharp rocks. Probably the weirdest one of mine...
 

soren7550

Overly Proud New Yorker
Dec 18, 2008
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Shots - I had to get a lot of them when I was younger (usually multiple shots during a singular visit), and they always hurt like hell.
How do I deal with it? For one, I can't go to a doctor (no insurance), and when I did have to go, I did my best to look away and ignore it.

Break-ins - This is more born from restless nights and hearing shit creaking about that freaked me out. It didn't help matters that thanks to my dipshit roomies, I had a break in. They didn't lock the door (evidently, they almost never do), and these people looking for the place next store just walked right in.
How do I deal with it? I try to rationalize the sounds I hear at night and make sure that the door is locked.

Various members of my family - Several of them have beaten the shit out of me, one tried to kill me on multiple occasions, one was a neo Nazi, and the other had me institutionalized. I'm not fond of them to say the least.
How do I deal with it? Avoid them, don't talk to them, and hope I don't have any nightmares about them.

Institutionalization - The time I was forced in there were among the worst times of my life, and I never want to go back.
How do I deal with it? Try to not somehow piss someone else off, hold on tight to my boyfriend when I inevitably have a night terror of being back there.
 
Sep 24, 2008
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I don't know what it was, it was probably fear, but I did not like leeches growing up. First thing's first. I was born 1980 and I grew up in the Bronx. So I never heard of leeches as they aren't around here anywhere.

I'm not sure if this is the right movie, but Harrison Ford did a movie called 'The Mosquito Coast' where he brings his family to the Amazon to live. His daughter gets separated, and they hear her scream. They find her and her leg is bloody. Just a giant wound and blood leaking. One of their guides say 'Leech attack'.

I didn't know what a Leech was. Then 'Stand By Me' comes up. You know the scene I'm talking about. They go into the lake, one boy points to the back of another's neck and there's this... Black, moving void attached to his neck. They yell leeches, run out of the lake and they are covered with these alien things, something I never seen before. And they are all over the boys.

Now, my young mind goes to that movie I saw with Harrison Ford. And I think of the size of the wound on that child's leg. I run to the encyclopedia (Those used to be in Book form, kids!) and I look it up. And it was one of those unfortunate times they had a picture along with article. And the picture is of a leech's mouth. A Pizza shaped monstrosity. I was freaked out.

Everything about a leech is designed to remind kids that monsters could actually exist in this world.
 

Exius Xavarus

Casually hardcore. :}
May 19, 2010
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Very sudden, very loud noises. Or even continuous loud noises. I get an extreme chill up my spine and an extreme tingling throughout my entire body which, incidentally, causes my eyes to water.

It's especially awful if I'm in the dark.

Fuck that noise.
 

Yopaz

Sarcastic overlord
Jun 3, 2009
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mParadox said:
Deep waters.

Come on, it's the abyss down there. And of course, near drowning experience at the deep does NOT help matters.

I can dig the dark on land, but the darkness underneath the quiet waves? Dude, bro, just no.
Honestly, I'd say that fear is pretty rational. Drowning just seems so unpleasant...

OT: Relationships and intimacy. The thought makes my throat close up... I hope to conquer that fear at some point.

I have to some degree conquered my fear of holding presentations. I've done so 2 times in the past weeks and they have all been moderately successful.
 

Smiley Face

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Jan 17, 2012
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Most of what fears I have are either mild enough to not be important, or rational/situational. One exception, however, was a fear of dogs - which made things problematic when one day, knowing this full well, my mum came home and said "Guess what? I got a dog!". Yes, it was a cute, adorable little puppy which couldn't even climb stairs if it tried, but I was terrified, and so I spent most of my time at home on the couch, with my feet carefully off the ground. However, a fear response like that can only last so long when it's tested on a day-to-day basis with no response, so within the year it was down to uncomfortableness, by the end of two that was gone as well.
 

Raxmond

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Jan 17, 2012
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Frogs.

Seriously. This one time a friend and I were walking home at night where there weren't any street lights, in the rain. Since this was a bit off from the city, the frogs abounded on the wet ground. I could hear them jumping around us in the darkness. I panicked.
 

Redlin5_v1legacy

Better Red than Dead
Aug 5, 2009
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Exius Xavarus said:
Very sudden, very loud noises.
To be honest, I think that is a fear most people have. Being startled by very loud, unexpected and unfamiliar sounds is something that most people I have met have experienced.
 

adamsaccount

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Jan 3, 2013
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Used to be scared of great white sharks and lions. I still am. I think theres good reasons for this.
 

Exius Xavarus

Casually hardcore. :}
May 19, 2010
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Redlin5 said:
Exius Xavarus said:
Very sudden, very loud noises.
To be honest, I think that is a fear most people have. Being startled by very loud, unexpected and unfamiliar sounds is something that most people I have met have experienced.
It's hard to take that as anything other than you trying to downplay my fear. Dur, everyone gets startled by a loud noise. That's a given. I wasn't talking about being startled. I'm more concerned about longer lasting noises. It doesn't just hurt my ears or have some kind of silly startling effect. I typed up more than what you're quoting and addressing and I'd appreciate that you didn't cherry pick my comment and downplay it, like it's any less valid that someone with aquaphobia, arachnophobia or even claustrophobia.
 

Redlin5_v1legacy

Better Red than Dead
Aug 5, 2009
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Exius Xavarus said:
Redlin5 said:
Exius Xavarus said:
Very sudden, very loud noises.
To be honest, I think that is a fear most people have. Being startled by very loud, unexpected and unfamiliar sounds is something that most people I have met have experienced.
It's hard to take that as anything other than you trying to downplay my fear. Dur, everyone gets startled by a loud noise. That's a given. I wasn't talking about being startled. I'm more concerned about longer lasting noises. It doesn't just hurt my ears or have some kind of silly startling effect. I typed up more than what you're quoting and addressing and I'd appreciate that you didn't cherry pick my comment and downplay it, like it's any less valid that someone with aquaphobia, arachnophobia or even claustrophobia.
That wasn't my intent. The way you described it just made me think of that general fear most people have.

Sorry.
 

Exius Xavarus

Casually hardcore. :}
May 19, 2010
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Redlin5 said:
Exius Xavarus said:
That wasn't my intent. The way you described it just made me think of that general fear most people have.

Sorry.
I didn't mean to sound so overly harsh and offended. But what I described as its effects on me is a bit more than just getting startled by a loud noise. I don't believe it's all that common as I've only met one other person affected in the same manner.
 

uzo

New member
Jul 5, 2011
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(someone else did this formatting so I went with it too .. keeps me on topic lol)

What fears did you get over?

Catfish. Dunno why, but as a little boy they used to freak me out. Oh, and movies "Return to Oz" and the Jabberwocky at the end of one of the Alice kiddy movies. Fuck me dead, that shit wasn't meant for kids and was likely produced by sadistic paedophiles I'm sure.

What fears can you deal with and overcome but still bother you?

Greys. I grew up through the 80s and 90s so it was all Communion, Fire In The Sky, Visitors, X-Files, Great Mysteries, The Extraordinary etc. Those bug-eyed fuckers used to freeze me at a glance and send daggers of ice through my heart. I can look at their piccies without freakin' though, now.

What fears stop you in your tracks?

Earthquakes. Lived in Japan for many years and hence through many quakes. None of the biggest ones, but no one likes that shit.
 

tsb247

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Mar 6, 2009
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I recently conquered my fear of spins in an airplane, and I must say that is the single most important fear that I have ever conquered. It was really holding me back!

As a student pilot, part of my training to get my certificate was practicing power on and power off stalls (they simulate engine failures and improper airspeed management on takeoff and landing respectively). The problem is that if those particular maneuvers aren't excecuted correctly, the airplane will get into a spin, and a recovery procedure is necessary to get out of it.

I spent a great deal of my training trying to avoid spins. They scared the hell out of me. Having the airplane spin and point itself straight at the ground while your airspeed builds quickly did not appeal to me. I would shake every time I heard the stall horn go off. Sure, I knew the procedure to recover, but I always hoped and prayed I would never have to use it. Spins are generally discussed with student pilots in a part 141 program, but they are generally not practiced.

One morning I found myself out on a solo flight. I was sent out by myself to practice what my instructor had taught me. I was due to complete my training within the next month or so, and I was confident I could complete all of the maneuvers quickly and get home in time for lunch.

I had climbed up to 4,500 feet for some added security during my maneuvers. I wanted to have plenty of room to recover should I screw something up. I'm glad I made that decision. I did my clearing turns and began to perform a power on stall. I throttled back to 1500 rpm and began tilting the nose up. As my airspeed dropped to 70kts, I pushed the power all the way in and I continued to pull the nose up. The airspeed continued to drop. The problem was that while I was watching my airspeed, I was not watching my turn-slip indicator. The airplane was unccordinated (not enough rudder to counter the yaw I was experiencing), and I was on the second stall horn. As the third and final, "Hey you! You're gonna stall now!" horn went off, I looked over and saw my turn turn-slip indicator. The ball was WAY over to the left. I knew at that instant what was going to happen.

All I remember thinking was, "Well, this is it. I've finally done it... I've gotten myself into a spin."

The airplane stalled, and as the nose came down it pitched slightly up again and rolled to the right. Down I went. All I remember was seeing green and brown in front of me; colors blending as they spiraled across my windscreen. Fortunately, I remembered the procedure for recovering, and I managed to get myself out of the spin and back into level flight fairly quickly. I was really shaken up. I was proud of myself for recovering successfully, but damn... I was scared stiff. I had never experienced anything like that before, and it all happened so fast. I completed my lesson and headed home.

For the next few weeks, I simply could not perform power on stalls. Literally, I could not make myself stall the airplane. My feet would shake on the rudder pedals, my palms would sweat, and my would subconsciously force the nose down to gain the vital airspeed I needed for straight and level flight. My isntructor was wondernig what was going on. He noted that I had mastered that same maneuver a few weeks prior, and he wasn't sure why I was freezing all of the sudden. When I told him what happened, he made a note of it, congratulated me on recovering, and we moved on.

A few days later, I sat down with my instructor and said, "I want to get through this program, and I need to get past this fear. The only way to do that is for you to demonstrate some spins and recovery for me." With that, we headed back out into our practice area where I would experience my first intentional spins.

My instructor didn't give me much of a choice. He insisted that performing some spins would cure me of my fear of them. I hesitantly agreed. As he pulled the airplane up into a power on stall, he mashed the rudder to the left as the airplane stalled, and down we went; spiraling towards the earth. He aggrivated the spin with the rudder. We spun faster and faster and I could feel myself being pulled out from the airplane's center of gravity and sticking to the door next to me. As the airspeed built up, my instructor recovered and pulled the Gs necessary to return to straight and level flight. I felt about double my weight as we pulled up and the horizone came back into view. We repeated this maneuver about four more times that day, and each and every time we recovered safely.

Since then, I have no fear of spins. I can perform power on and power off stalls without the fear of getting into trouble. I now know that if I find myself in that situation again, I can get out of it just about every time.

I have since passed my Private Pilot check ride and earned my pilot's certificate. It's something I could never have done had I not gotten over that fear. It took a lot of work on my part to get past my own fear of falling to finally realize that there really wasn't anything to fear at all.

For those unfamiliar with a spin:


They can be absolutely terrifying if you are not prepared for them, and they can be deadly if a pilot does not know how to get out of them. Fortunately, I received some awesome training and a swift kick in the rear!
 

tsb247

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Mar 6, 2009
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mParadox said:
Deep waters.

Come on, it's the abyss down there. And of course, near drowning experience at the deep does NOT help matters.

I can dig the dark on land, but the darkness underneath the quiet waves? Dude, bro, just no.
I am the same way. I don't mind lakes and ponds, but the ocean freaks me the hell out! Perhaps it's knowing that there are miles of dark water beneath me, and it doesn't help to know that there are creatures below me that are the size of a freak'n city bus.

I suppose more than anything, it's the feeling of being so small, insignificant, and powerless when in the ocean.
 

Yuno Gasai

Queen of Yandere
Nov 6, 2010
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Current fears:

Water - I can't swim, and I have been unable to submerge myself in any body of water that rises above my hips for as long as I can remember. I do desperately want to learn how to swim, but it's physically impossible because I become inconsolably terrified if water rises above my hips.

Morphsuits - I have literally no idea why they terrify me so much, but there's something deeply unsettling about a bodysuit with no distinguishable facial features. They just creep me out to no end. (And no, my fear was not influenced by Slenderman - my fear existed before I was aware of his urban legend).

Conquered fears:

Vomiting - I used to be really afraid of throwing up, but on New Year's Eve this year, I got blackout drunk and spend the majority of New Year's Day hunched over the toilet emptying the contents of my stomach. It was not a pleasant experience, but I'm strangely grateful for it as it allowed me to conquer my fear.

Motorways - I used to be utterly terrified of driving on the motorway. I'm not sure what I thought was going to happen, but having to drive my car back from the dealership (four hours away from my home) really helped me to conquer that fear. I'm now pretty comfortable driving on the motorway, which is really convenient seeing as I need to use it to get to work.
 

Kevlar Eater

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Sep 27, 2009
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Wasps - I was attacked by quite a few when I was in grade school. I try to avoid them whenever possible.

Social interaction - From a phone call to just saying hi to someone that isn't related to me -- especially if they're a pretty lady -- I choke up and walk away, and from there I've repulsed the other person. Well, unless I'm speaking to someone in a professional manner, then I'm okay with that.

Neither are conquered.
 

Redlin5_v1legacy

Better Red than Dead
Aug 5, 2009
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Kevlar Eater said:
Social interaction - From a phone call to just saying hi to someone that isn't related to me -- especially if they're a pretty lady -- I choke up and walk away, and from there I've repulsed the other person. Well, unless I'm speaking to someone in a professional manner, then I'm okay with that.
Internet interactions are fine though?

*tries not to be repulsive*