Fear of failure Sucking at it Believing they have to stop thinking (ps - that's impossible) Don't have time Don't know how Seems Culty Doubt Fear of changing Fear of what they find Fear of feeling emotions Fear of having to change Fear of truth Comfortable in pain, not comfortable with feeling good Unworthiness People not liking them if they change Fear of taking
responsibility Fear of People leaving you Too wound up physically, too many stimulants to sit Making people tired.
Not exact matches
Therefore, although Jesus would be the last
person to use
fear as a moral weapon (except in the case
of the desperately self - complacent), he did teach that life should be lived with a due sense
of awe and
responsibility.
The Church, teacher
of humanity, never tires
of exhorting
people, especially the young
of whom you are a part, to remain watchful and not to
fear choosing «alternative» paths which only Christ can indicate... Jesus calls all his friends to live in sobriety and solidarity, to create sincere and disinterested emotional relationships with others... From you, dear young students, he asks for honest commitment to study, cultivating a mature sense
of responsibility and a shared interest in the common good.
Christ's concern for individuals enslaved by the products
of their sinful condition should be motivation enough for Christians to concern themselves for
people today — who are increasingly demonstrating signs
of electronic narcosis, with consequent effects
of isolation, alienation,
fear, abnegation
of responsibility and loss
of joy.
He told the BBC on Sunday: «I think, actually, there is a
responsibility on all
of us in the free West to try and help some
of those
people fleeing Syria, literally in
fear of their lives.»
David Congdon, head
of campaigns and policy at learning disability charity Mencap, added: «The government has a
responsibility to ensure the cuts do not disproportionately impact on those
people least able to afford it, yet the chancellor's focus on further welfare cuts means many disabled
people will
fear they will continue to be the hardest hit.
I addressed that
fear in an 11th - grade unit on The Merchant
of Venice by having students divide an assigned research question into three or four subtopics depending on the number
of people in the group — each individual had his or her own
responsibility as the groups explored the cultural and contextual background
of the play and then wrote a collaborative research paper.
With regard to dealing with
fear, despair, hatred, rage, and violence, the Axial sages gave their
people and give us, Armstrong says, two important pieces
of advice: first there must be personal
responsibility and self - criticism, and it must be followed by practical, effective action.
America must lead and I
fear the American
people and their political leadership have an astonishingly weak grasp
of the
responsibility that lies on their shoulders.
Whether criminal
responsibility should be attributed to such
people at all, or should be reduced because
of the
fear, pain, confusion or frank incomprehension
of the world as seen through their eyes is a question for other
people; clinical psychologists can assist by addressing the complexity
of such situations.
News organizations bear a
responsibility for calling these posts what they are: shameful attempts to prey on
people's
fears during a crisis, spread by some
of the worst elements in our society.
An AMA survey, which this year reached managers and employees in about 500 U.S. companies, found that
fear of being held responsible for mistakes or failures was the single biggest obstacle to encouraging
people to take greater
responsibility.