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⊹   PRACTICES · 014   ⊹

Fear Reframing: Excitement without Breath

Bashar's most famous teaching on fear: 'Fear is excitement without breath.' Biochemically, fear and excitement produce nearly identical physiological responses—increased heart rate, adrenaline, heightened awareness. The difference is the interpretation and the breath.

When you label the sensation as 'fear,' you contract and resist; when you label it 'excitement,' you expand and allow. The practice is simple: when you feel fear, consciously breathe deeply into the sensation and mentally say 'This is excitement about something I desire.' This reframing is not denial but a recognition that the same energy can be experienced positively.

Bashar notes that many people are actually more afraid of their own power and success than of failure, because success means change and expanded responsibility.

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