By The Pathwork Guide
QUESTION: If someone has repressed fear and then has come to realize it, and this realization makes the fear overflow -- you discussed today that whenever there is an overflow, there is a struggle -- how can he cope with this?
ANSWER: It is an error to believe that just allowing yourself to become aware of the fear will cause the overflow you cannot cope with. It is not the awareness that causes this difficulty of coping with the fear, but the attitude towards the existence of the fear, and what lies underneath it. The wrong attitude is that a struggle against the fear exists, a struggle in the unhealthy way. Struggling in the sense of "I should not be in fear; I do not want to have fear because it is unpleasant," is a fight against a part of yourself, against that part that happens to be in fear now. The feeling of being flooded by fear comes from bracing against the wave of fear. You do this even though your defenses against non-recognition have been weakened and parts of the fear-stream penetrate in spite of the stemming against it. You have partly removed the barricade because you realized that it cannot bring the development you aspire to, but only partly so. Your other half bargains and wants to have the fear removed before it is fully out of hiding, with all its ramifications. If you stop stemming and struggling against the fear, if you can say, "I, a human being like many others, am now in fear," you will finally float with the wave, you will rise on the wave, rather than being immersed in the wave of fear. You will swim in the fear. This will eliminate the feeling of danger, although the fear will still be present, but experienced in a very different manner. Immersion is due to stemming against the wave, struggling against it. Swimming in it does not mean drowning: it is the opposite. The fear of drowning prevents a person from swimming, although he has the perfect capacity to swim. Only when you swim can you come to see what is behind the fear. The nagging, persisting, enduring fears are the unrealistic ones that you do not cope with properly, regardless of what the issue may be. Underneath these, you will always find other "streams of emotions" that are blocked off from flowing. These other emotions may be manifold: hostility, humiliation, pride, shame, hurt, arrogance, self-importance, self-pity, insistence on unreasonable demands, and many more. Some of these other feelings are there, but you struggle against them just as you struggle against the fear. Very often the first layer to be found underneath the fear are strong hostilities that are particularly taboo. If they are allowed into the fresh air of consciousness, the fear will automatically cease. I promise this will be so, and this has been corroborated by my friends who have already gone through this phase.
QUESTION: And if it is not a psychological fear, but a physical fear?
ANSWER: The attitude towards a physical predicament does not preclude psychological deviations. A realistic fear will be coped with in the best and the most reasonable way possible. If the unpleasant result one fears is not eliminated by these activities, then acceptance of the unpleasantness must finally come, if it be coped with maturely and realistically. But this acceptance is impossible to attain so long as one struggles against the non-acceptance. The mind is being divided: part of it says "I should accept what cannot be altered," and another part of it says "I do not want to accept it." Whenever real situations result in enduring, nagging, drawn-out fear, this division exists and is not recognized. Moreover, the same underlying negative emotions are still kept in hiding. They simply make themselves known with a now real outer reason. But the existence of the outer reason does not eliminate their presence. The inevitable difficulties of life can be met only if the psychological deviations are recognized. If a real outer fear immerses you, then you struggle against you in life. And here we come around full circle to the beginning of this lecture.
My dearest friends, be blessed, all of you. May the strength and the love that is pouring forth not only fill you with courage that you have all you need within yourself in order to master any situation, but may this also give you the strength and the wisdom, as well as the inner willingness, to really understand what I said tonight. For this would mean such a liberation for you. It would mean such a difference between living and only half-living. You cannot do enough to ponder over this lecture. Whatever is obscure or flat or merely words, ask about it here at the period of discussion. Try to make it a lived knowledge, apply it to yourself personally, rather than possess it intellectually. At the discussion bring your personal problems. In that way you will not only help yourselves but also others. Be blessed, all of you. Receive our love and blessings. Do not fear, you have nothing to fear. Pursue this work and you will become forever stronger, more creative, more harmonious with yourself and with your life. You will become more alive than you ever thought possible. Be in peace. Be in God.
The Guide
by Eva Pierrakos
April 26, 1963
Copyright 1963, the Center for the Living Force, Inc.