I love being a career and personal coach and writing my Psychology Today blog: How to Do Life.
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Some of my best recent work is linked to on this blog, but my older writings and the archive of my KALW (NPR-San Francisco) radio show are free on www.martynemko.com.
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Fear
of failure is a widely cited inhibitor of self-actualization. In my
experience with clients and myself, that’s often not as villainous as
claimed. Irrational fear of failure is a problem: a person is
competent to do X and can easily survive failure, indeed learn from it,
yet nonetheless, in fear of failure, doesn’t do it. But often,
task-avoidance for fear of failure is rational: the person estimates that their time would be better spent on something else.
A less discussed, often more problematic and, fortunately, more ameliorable inhibitor of wise action is fear of embarrassment: that others will think less of them. A few examples:
For fear of seeming less-than, being unwilling to ask one’s network for job leads.
For fear of sounding awkward, not asking someone for a date.
For fear of showing vulnerability, being too withholding.
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