Heidi wrote:I think that a phobia is False Evidence Appearing Real.
Let me give you an example.
Personally, I'm extremely afraid of spiders and most insects. This is a phobia, since spiders or grasshopers don't really pose a threat to my safety.
However, if I come across an angry dog, I feel really frightened, even though I love dogs as pets very much. The fear I feel in front of the angry dog is not False Evidence because the animal is really posing a threat to my safety.
I don't know... I may be mistaken...
Heidi,
You are not mistaken, the situation you described with the dog definitely qualifies as real fear.
The problem with fear is that by definition it can be real or imaginary.
When you think about when it appears the most often, it is rather the imaginary kind.
Like, being afraid to tell someone something, or ask someone something... because of a fear of what that person
might say or do.
Being afraid to speak in front of people, for the fear of getting embarrassed.
Being afraid to be how we really are, for the fear of not being loved.
People imagine a negative outcome and feel fear in anticipation of it.
So, while there is the other kind of fear as well, I think in most cases it is something that we can overcome and leave behind.
Sabina