In this extraordinary time of COVID-19, fear is firmly in the driver seat for many of us. Our internal fear meter has been steadily rising since this pandemic began on the other side of the world. Fear drives a lot of our feelings and our decisions. We struggle with many questions. How did we get here? How long do we stay here? Where is the end? Is there an end?
Do you remember when you first heard of the Coronavirus? We first learned of an outbreak in a region of China that most of us have never heard of. It seemed far enough away that it didn’t pose any danger. Then things escalated rather quickly. China forces its citizens to quarantine themselves at home. Our fear meter ticks up a notch. Cruise ships couldn’t dock because ports were afraid they carried infected passengers. One case is confirmed in the U.S. Then another and then another. The fear meter needle moves up even more. Then Italy sounds the alarm. Then the rest of Europe. Fear is evident in financial markets as their values begin to tumble. Our stress rises and our internal fear meter is higher than ever in recent memory.
I’m not sure exactly at what point people’s fear made them rush the grocery stores and hoard all the bread, pasta, milk and toilet paper. A roll of TP, not even single ply, was anywhere to be found. Fear had reached a new high water mark. Concern was now an understatement. Full blown panic was still in the distance but was in our line of sight, and it seemed fast approaching. States issued stay at home orders or so called “Safer at home” orders which sound less scary. Sports were cancelled, schools closed, followed by bars and restaurants, then beaches and churches. Any gathering spot was now taboo and testing centers began popping up and the count of confirmed cases skyrocketed each day. The outbreak that turned into an epidemic and then a pandemic was now at our doorstep. Homemade masks and latex gloves are now the new fashion trend inside the grocery store.
At this point in time, we still don’t know how many more people will be infected, how many more will die, and how long this unprecedented event will last. Fear of the unknown is here and quickly outwearing its welcome.
As almost everything is shutdown for the duration of this pandemic such as businesses, schools, parks, and stores, it has given people time to think. Without distraction, constant contemplation can be bad when it comes to our fears. Questions with no answers stew in our heads. It can consume our thoughts and feed the fear. Fear is an emotion centered on the anticipation of danger. It is a belief that something bad may happen. Fear can protect us from danger and that aspect is good. But fear can also consume us and often the fear is about something that isn’t real, won’t happen, or very unlikely to happen. But it’s the uncertainty that feeds the fear and uncertainty can be described as a lack of belief. Danger can be real but fear is not. Let’s explain.
To better understand fear, let’s look at the meaning of darkness. There is nothing real or tangible about darkness. Darkness is just a description of space that lacks light. Darkness is therefore the mere absence of light. Likewise, there is no such thing as coldness. The way you make something cold is you remove heat. For example, a refrigerator doesn’t make things cold, it works by removing the heat from the inside. Just like darkness, coldness isn’t real. It is merely the absence of heat. The same holds true for fear. Fear isn’t real. Fear is merely the absence of faith.
The fear that you feel just means that faith is not present. Just as we can eliminate darkness by turning on a light or remove coldness by turning on the heat, you can purge your fear by swapping it for faith. I'm not just talking about faith in the religious sense although the same concept applies. Faith is a belief just as fear is a belief and they are direct opposite beliefs. Just as opposites go, one is real and one is not.
How do you swap fear with faith? Since faith is a belief, we can change our level of faith the same way our regular beliefs change. For instance, the learning of new information can change our beliefs. We replace unknowns with truths. If we learn something new that we didn’t know before, it will change our pre-existing thoughts. We know a little more each day but we need to be cautious of the source of our new information. The spread of misinformation is easier with social media.
We can also change our beliefs by creating a new future vision for ourselves. Do you really believe that this pandemic will last or is it likely that it will begin to recede much like flood waters and we will be back to some sense of normalcy in a matter of weeks? Can you visualize yourself at some point in the near future venturing back out of our house, kids going back to school, sporting events taking place again, and businesses opening back up? Can you see that light at the end of the tunnel? Do you see the light evicting the darkness and growing brighter each day? Envision how your life will be once we get the all clear to resume our routines. Recognize that this will happen, it’s just a matter of time and that timeframe is likely short term.
One other thing we can do to change our beliefs and eliminate fear is to build upon our existing faith. Faith can be fertilized and watered to grow into certainty and fill the space occupied by fear and squeeze the fear out. We can train our brain to be more optimistic and increase our certainty. Focus on positivity boosters such as fun activities you can't wait to do once the orders are lifted.
Until you have your own new vision, belief, and certainty, you can borrow mine. I believe, sooner, rather than later, we will get the “all clear” and be allowed to congregate, socialize, and do all the things that allow us to connect with each other again. We will soon be looking back and reflecting on our experience. We will memorialize the victims, heal those still sick, and tell stories about the great toilet paper shortage of 2020 and discuss what our favorite meme was on social media. We will feel more alive, experience our freedoms once again and be a lot more grateful for what we previously took for granted. “Flattening the Curve” will take on new meaning as we turn focus to flattening the curve of our bulging bellies from all those quarantine snacks. And most of all, faith will fill the void of fear and move us all forward into a much more certain future. Fear is now on the outside looking in and will soon be an afterthought. Keep the faith.