The Moment Fear Loses Its Power: How to Train Fear Like a Guard Dog
Fear isn't the enemy. It's a loyal guard dog that's never been trained — and the moment you take control is the moment it loses its power.
In this episode, Greg breaks down the guard dog metaphor: fear is doing exactly what it's supposed to do, notifying you when something might be up. The problem isn't fear. The problem is that most of us have never done any conscious training around it. So it runs amok in the background, barking at flies, ripping up cushions, taking the wheel.
Then he walks through the three-step process he uses every time fear shows up.
First, gratitude. Thank you for notifying me.
Second, evaluate the situation logically — what are the potential threats, and what boundaries need to come on right now (phone in hand, lights on, sidearm if it's that kind of alert).
Third, execute. Take action. And the rule that holds it all together: you must follow the process every single time. Sloppy or spotty, and your fear gets confused and starts doing more, just like a strong-willed dog that never got conditioned consistently.
Who this is for:
Anyone who's been told to ignore fear and just push through. Anyone whose fear feels like it's running the house. Anyone ready to stop writing fear off as false evidence appearing real and actually take control of it.
What you'll take away: Why getting rid of fear isn't the goal — control is How fear gains power the same way an untrained dog does The three-step process: gratitude, evaluate, execute Why "just take action" advice keeps biting you in the ass What boundaries actually look like when fear alerts you to something real How consistency turns fear into something that's one step ahead of you instead of working against you
FAQs this episode:
Isn't the goal to get rid of fear?
No. The goal is to control fear. You wouldn't control something you don't have. Fear is a beautiful emotion — a loyal, highly trained guard dog when you're in command. We're not writing it off as false evidence appearing real, and we're not pretending it's not a thing. We want it to lose its power so we can be in control of it.
Why does fear feel like it's running my life?
Because it's never been consciously trained. Most of us heard the bro-guru advice — fear is false evidence, just take action — and skipped the conditioning step entirely. So fear runs amok in the background like an untrained dog barking at a fly on the couch and ripping up cushions trying to protect you from nothing.
What's the three-step process for handling fear?
First, gratitude. Immediately thank fear for notifying you. Second, evaluate the situation logically — what are the potential threats, what boundaries are needed (phone, lights, sidearm, whatever the alert calls for). Third, execute. Take action because you're in control, you've identified the threats, and you've set the boundaries.
Why does consistency matter so much?
Because if you're sloppy with the process, fear gets confused, just like a strong-willed dog that gets inconsistent training. It thinks it needs to do more for you, so it keeps escalating.
Follow the process every time, every time, every time — and eventually fear shows up one step ahead of you, already alerting you to threats and possible boundaries before you even ask. What if I don't know what process to follow? Outsource it. Find the person, the system, the book, or the process you choose to follow, and then commit to it relentlessly.
The moment fear truly loses its power is when you have a process in place and you internally commit to always following it. Check us out on YouTube — the channel is Success After Trauma. Tell a friend who needs to hear this one.
#PowerInThePain #GregPease #FearAndPower #MindsetShift #SuccessAfterTrauma
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