Harmless enough phone calls – even a pleasant transactional 20-second
interaction – can evoke a fear response if we are sensitive to our own
complexities for previous trauma. Receiving a business call from a friend and
mentor came to remind me of the power of a relatively recent punitive
experience, where some few years ago now I was more than casually affected by a
passive aggressive manager (in the secular work environment).
The particular manager was always hard to read and difficult to
get to know. He was distant and always seemed to communicate the harder truths
by email. He isolated me and gave me work that was unimportant. He never
expressed empathy that I was able to see. I grew depressed by the situation,
though it took me eighteen months to finally realise why I was regularly sad,
fearful and irritable. Amazingly, it was the very same day that I finally
acknowledged this manager’s affect on me – and my unhealthy responses to his
management style – my wife was thinking the same thing (“My husband needs help.”).
I sought help and the rest is history.
One of the side effects of being bullied is we get ingrained in
a pattern of trauma – our brains begin to detect we are in danger and the
flight, fight and freeze responses are regularly enabled ready for action or
inaction.
These patterns of learned behaviour tend to stick, and then we
cannot help but revisit them – even unconsciously.
During this abovementioned phone call it was suggested that a
change to the plan for a business meeting take place – that another party be
added. The change to the plan, I believed, at least initially, was a positive
change that worked in my and our favour. But within seconds I could detect
resistance – “what if it’s a trick?” – within me. The logical part of me,
thankfully, was one-hundred-and-ten percent trusting and, seconds later, I was
able to acknowledge the fear response for what it was.
The fear response is a learned
response.
The fear response, however, is not always identified. Sadly, we can find ourselves reacting in fear, when the
better response would be to check the thought with a logical plumbline.
But that assumes the thought is brought to conscious awareness.
We can only do something with negative and fearful thoughts if
they come to our awareness. Most of the time, however, we can be brought to the
cusp of a panic attack when our awareness is heightened around an instance of
trauma.
***
Tapping into the mind’s power for a fearless life is paramount.
Only when we can routinely explore our fear – as we become consciously aware of
it in the moment – are we able to turn a negative into a positive.
Turning a negative into a positive by controlling what we think
is one key portion of living Jesus’ abundant life.
© 2014 S.
J. Wickham.
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