Living Without Fear: How Fear Controls Us and How to Break Free
Living Without Fear
Many students, teachers, parents, and working people live with a heavy feeling inside. They worry about money, about what others will say, about getting sick, about growing old, about losing loved ones, and even about dying. These worries make them quiet, careful, and easy to control. This article explains these six big fears in simple words, shows how some politicians use them to get votes, and tells you how to feel free again.
The Six Big Fears That Hold Us Back
Long ago, a wise thinker wrote about six basic fears that almost everyone feels. Some people connect these ideas to deep wisdom found in ancient books, including the rich and old. The six fears are:
- Fear of poverty – worrying you will never have enough money.
- Fear of criticism – being scared of what people will say or think about you.
- Fear of ill health – always thinking you might get sick.
- Fear of loss of love – fearing that family or friends will leave you.
- Fear of old age – worrying that growing old means you become useless.
- Fear of death – being afraid of dying.
These fears are like invisible chains. They stop you from trying new things, speaking your mind, or chasing your dreams.
How Fear of Poverty Controls Students and Parents
Students study hard not because they love learning, but because they fear becoming poor. Parents push their children to get high marks so they can get good jobs later. Everyone is scared of not having money for food, house, or school fees.
This fear makes people accept low pay, work in jobs they hate, or stay quiet when something is unfair at work. Politicians know this. They make big promises like "I will give you jobs" or "I will make sure prices don't rise." People vote for them out of fear, hoping the leader will save them from being poor. But often, after elections, little changes.
Why Teachers and Professionals Fear Criticism
Teachers worry about what the principal, parents, or students will say if they try something new. Professionals stay silent in meetings because they fear being laughed at or called wrong. This fear kills new ideas and creativity.
Politicians use this fear very cleverly. They call their opponents bad names and spread rumours. They make people scared to support anyone else. Many voters choose a leader not because they like him, but because they fear what others will say if they support the other side. This is how fear of criticism stops us from thinking freely and voting honestly.
How Fear of Ill Health, Old Age, and Death is Used
Many people are scared of getting sick because treatment costs a lot. Old people fear becoming a burden. The thought of death makes some so worried they cannot enjoy today.
Leaders sometimes make these fears bigger during elections. They talk about diseases, old age problems, or dangers everywhere. They say only they can protect you. When people are afraid, they stop asking tough questions and simply follow the leader who promises safety.
The Big Game: How Politicians Use Fear to Control Votes
Fear is a powerful tool. When people are scared, they don't think clearly. They want someone strong to protect them. Politicians understand this very well.
They create or increase fear by talking again and again about problems – unemployment, crime, enemies, or economic troubles. They make it sound like only their party can save the country. They brainwash people by repeating the same fearful messages on TV, radio, and social media. Many common people, students, and even teachers fall into this trap and vote out of fear instead of hope or clear thinking.
This is not love for the country. This is control. When people live in fear, they give away their power to those who promise to remove the fear.
Why We Must Break Free from These Fears
Living in fear is like living in a small dark room. You cannot grow, you cannot dream big, and you cannot live happily. Students cannot learn well. Teachers cannot teach with joy. Parents cannot raise confident children. Professionals cannot do their best work.
The Ethiopian Bible and other ancient wisdom teach us to have faith and courage instead of fear. When you understand that these six fears are common to all humans, you stop feeling weak. You realize that everyone is fighting the same battle inside.
How to Overcome Fear and Think Clearly
First, understand your fears. Write them down. When you see them on paper, they look smaller.
Second, take small brave steps. Speak up once in class. Try one new idea at work. Help someone even if you are scared of what people will say.
Third, focus on what you can control. Work hard, learn new skills, be kind, and save whatever little you can. Action kills fear.
Fourth, question what politicians say. Ask yourself: "Is this true or is it just to make me scared so I vote for them?" Think with your own mind instead of voting out of fear.
Fifth, remember that many great people felt these fears but still did big things. You can too.
A Final Word
Students, teachers, parents, and professionals – all of us are human. We all feel these six fears. But we don't have to live as prisoners of fear. When we understand how fear is used to control us, we can break free.
Choose courage over fear. Choose clear thinking over blind following. Choose hope over worry. When we do this, we become free citizens who vote with wisdom, not with fear. That is how we build a better society for everyone.
The power is in your hands. Don't let fear take it away. Live boldly, think freely, and refuse to be controlled.
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