I borrowed this from Tara Mohr.
Pachad is “projected or imagined fear,” the “fear whose
objects are imagined.” That, in contemporary terms, is what we might
think of as overreactive, irrational, lizard brain fear: the fear of
horrible rejection that will destroy us or the fear that we will simply
combust if we step out of our comfort zones.
There is a second Hebrew word for fear, yirah. Rabbi Lew
describes yirah as “the fear that overcomes us when we suddenly find
ourselves in possession of considerably more energy than we are used to,
inhabiting a larger space than we are used to inhabiting. It is also
the feeling we feel when we are on sacred ground.
If you’ve felt a calling in your heart, or uncovered an authentic
dream for your life, or felt a mysterious sense of inner inspiration
around a project or idea, you recognize this description.
We often conflate or confuse the two types of fear, and simply call
what we are experiencing “fear.” But we can discern them more closely,
and in doing so, more effectively manage fear so it doesn’t get in our
way.
Next time you are in a moment that brings fear:
1.Ask yourself: what part of this fear is pachad?
Write down the imagined outcomes you fear, the lizard brain fears.
Remind yourself that they are just imagined, and that pachad-type fears
are irrational.
2. Savor yirah. Ask yourself: what part of this fear is yirah? You’ll know yirah because it has a tinge of exhilaration and awe -while pachad has a sense of threat and panic. Lean into – and look for – the callings and leaps that bring yirah.
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