Is Fear Beneficial or Damaging to Our Lives?

  • November 02th 9:00AM
  • Rachel Segal
Image caption Getty Images: Keystone

*Updated 2023

President Roosevelt first introduced us to the soothing concept that the only thing we have to fear is fear itself. He also reminded Americans that freedom from fear was one of four essential freedoms. However, almost a century later, it seems that Roosevelt’s advice has been ignored. Before the coronavirus pandemic, Americans were living in what was considered as the safest era in history. However, the last few years have brought with them many new causes of fears, both politics-based and health-based. Not to mention the media’s constant barrage of fear-based news and advertisements demonstrate that fear still governs American lives. And footage from wars around the world only add to rising domestic fears of related hate crimes.

Whether or not we realize it, fear plays a significant role in shaping our world view, decisions, behavior and ways of thinking. The ultimate question is whether we are better or worse off because of the existence of fear.

Here are three reasons why fear is beneficial to our lives and three reasons why it is damaging.

 

Fear Is Damaging to Our Lives

 

Instructional fear makes us focus on the wrong risks

As we fear what’s available in our memory, and the media tends to keep images of terror and death fresh, we seem to be extremely fearful of miniscule risks despite the minute chances of personally experiencing any of the vivid examples we see. For instance, a study showed that a rise in violence portrayed in TV dramas since the late 1990s has made Americans more afraid of crime despite a fall in actual crime rates. Additionally, after 9/11, Americans were afraid to fly even though driving to the airport is more dangerous. In the year after 9/11, it was calculated that an estimated 1,500 Americans died on the road while trying to avoid the fate of the 246 victims killed in the four deadly flights.

 

It limits how we live

Being afraid of failing to meet family or society’s expectations plays a big role in shaping our life choices. Whether blatantly or subtly conditioned by family or societal pressures and norms, these fears often linger in our unconscious, influencing our career and relationship choices. For example, people may embark on a particular education and career path solely out of fear of disappointing or being rejected by their parents. Yet even if pursuing your genuine passion and dream job, fear of failure can limit your career potential – as can fear of success. The latter, clinically deemed Imposter Syndrome, is the crippling yet common phenomenon of doubting one’s abilities and decisions.

 

On a personal level, being afraid of going against social convention can make people forsake true love for marriages that bring material stability.  On the flip side, this same fear can also keep people trapped in doomed marriages instead of divorcing.

 

Fear can be manipulated by others

Being afraid of death can also influence people’s political choices. For example, two post-9/11 studies found that subjects in a group that had a higher awareness of death favored a political candidate who was perceived as a savior and who preferred an aggressive strategy against their enemies over one who opted for diplomacy.

 

Additionally, dictators like Adolf Hitler, Joseph Stalin and Saddam Hussein, to name just a few, rose to power by exploiting people’s fears. When gripped by fear, whether real or imagined, it can slow or disrupt people’s rationale and abilities to make cognitive decisions.  This can make them easy targets for manipulation or even harm by fake news or by leaders who promise protection from a perceived threat.

Fear is Beneficial to Our Lives

 

It instills protective self-preservation    

Maybe you were bitten by a dog when you were younger and, ever since, you’ve been afraid of dogs. This fear conditioning can be life-saving, as it tells us when we are in danger and can therefore keep us out of harm’s way.  As fear generates an instinctual state of heightened arousal within us, it alerts us to be cautious even in split-second decision-making. After all, once you’ve burned yourself by touching a hot oven, or almost drowned by venturing too far out in the ocean, you’ll never do it again. Not to mention that at the beginning of the pandemic, fear of catching the coronavirus caused mass amounts of people to stay at home, cancel their travel plans, and wear masks when out and about, preventative moves that likely saved countless people from getting sick.

 

Research suggests that babies in their first few days can learn fear through the odor of their distraught mothers, which can happen even if a mother experienced a specific fear before pregnancy. This shows us that even before we are old enough to comprehend terror, we are introduced to a fight or flight instinct, which will help us develop tendencies for life-long self-preservation.

 

It drives personal growth and meaning

While many – if not most – people are afraid of death, we are motivated by our mortality to live as fulfilling a life as possible. According to terror management theory, many people manage their fear of death by searching for life-long meaning that will continue to exist after death. This can derive from having kids, participating in a group, like religion, that will endure beyond its members’ lives, or by producing art, music, or other works that have a lasting legacy.

 

It can transform us to save others’ lives

Life is unpredictable, and danger can come out of nowhere, whether from war, terrorism or smaller-scale crimes. In such instances, when we are terrified by something staring us in the face, the body’s response can transform us. When under intense pressure, fear can enable people to summon enormous energy or power reserves that are normally inaccessible. The result can seem nothing short of a superhuman response, like lifting a car to save the person squashed underneath.

 

“Under acute stress, the body’s sympathetic nervous system prepares the body for sustained, vigorous action. The adrenal gland dumps cortisol and adrenaline into the bloodstream. Blood pressure surges and the heart races, delivering oxygen and energy to the muscles. It’s the biological equivalent of opening the throttle of an engine,” explains Jeff Wise in Scientific American.

 

The Bottom Line: Experiences in our lives may have left us with intense fears that affect our values and life choices. However, while fear can affect us negatively, it can inspire us to find and create meaning and can save us – and others – from mistakes and even harm.  How does fear affect your life?

Follow us on Facebook, on Twitter @tweetspective