Definition: Physical fear is a response to an immediate, tangible threat to one’s body or physical well-being.
Cause: It is triggered by real, external stimuli that threaten survival or bodily harm.
Examples:
Effects on the Body:
Purpose: Prepares the body to either confront the danger (fight) or escape from it (flight).
Definition: Psychological fear deals with perceived threats to emotional, mental, or social well-being, often linked to anxieties about potential future events.
Cause: Driven by internal thoughts, beliefs, or projections rather than immediate physical dangers.
Examples:
Effects on the Body and Mind:
Purpose: Originally evolved to help anticipate future dangers, but can become maladaptive if left unchecked.
Physical fear you can manage, for example if the snake suddenly comes across either you jump or move away, the moment it is gone from there your fear is gone, I might be excited for sometime but, in case of psychological fear it is tough because there is nothing in front of you so you can't dodge it or escape". The escape plan is simple just by realizing, it is "not real" there is no snake to fear. It might look so simple but, yes it is just a second when you realize it not real so it doesn't exist, so there is no need to fight, in fact you cannot fight any thing which doesn't exist, a snake you can or a tiger you can but not something which is not existing. Close your eyes feel the anxiety, realize the threat is not real. "The bottom line is you can fix the problem that exists, and you don't fix anything that doesn't exist, so no need to be anxious hance no need to fear".