Fear and anxiety about the future are like a shadow that is always there. It can be light, almost invisible, or it can envelop you completely, leaving you without strength or desire to do anything. The future is frightening because of its uncertainty. We don't know what will happen with our jobs, health, loved ones, or the world. We fear not making it, making mistakes, losing. This anxiety is not an innate flaw but a part of our psyche meant to protect us from threats. But when it becomes obsessive, it starts to destroy our lives. How to deal with it?
Why Do We Fear the Future
Anxiety is a reaction to the unknown. Our brain doesn't like gaps, it tries to fill them, but often fills them with negative scenarios. This is an evolutionary mechanism: "better to be cautious than to miss the danger." In the modern world, dangers have changed: instead of saber-toothed tigers, there are layoffs, exams, loans, loneliness. But the mechanism remains the same. We can't predict the future, but we can imagine it, and often imagine the worst. This is added to by the influence of news, which is full of disasters. We stop noticing that, for example, life expectancy is increasing, crime is decreasing, vaccines work. We focus on risks. This leads to chronic anxiety — a state where fear becomes the background of everyday life.
What is the Dangers of Chronic Anxiety
When anxiety becomes constant, it stops being useful. It doesn't mobilize, it paralyzes. We stop making decisions because we are afraid of the consequences. We postpone tasks because "it's all bad anyway." We lose sleep, appetite, joy. Physically, anxiety manifests as muscle tension, rapid heartbeat, headaches. Psychologically, it is a feeling of helplessness and apathy. A person starts to avoid any uncertainty, which means avoiding any opportunities for development. Anxiety doesn't allow us to make plans, change jobs, start relationships, travel. It narrows the world down to a small safe cell. Therefore, we need to fight ...
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