There is, to be sure, sometimes only a small difference between being alert to possible danger and allowing oneself to become terrified to the point of paralysis by seeming or imagined portents.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
There are more things to alarm us than to harm us, and we suffer more often in apprehension than reality.
I tend to think you're fearless when you recognize why you should be scared of things, but do them anyway.
I am pretty fearless, and you know why? Because I don't handle fear very well; I'm not a good terrified person.
A person's fears are lighter when the danger is at hand.
Apprehension is natural, but it must not be concluded that it is a threat. Certainly not.
Worry does not mean fear, but readiness for the confrontation.
I live in a kind of controlled awareness. I wouldn't call it fear, but it's an awareness. I know I have a responsibility to behave in a certain way. I'm able to do that.
If you act scared, your body produces adrenaline.
There's fear in everything, but we can't just succumb to that. We have to suppress it, so we get used to suppressing fear to make it through the our day. Otherwise, we'd become paralyzed by them.
Anxiety is not fear, exactly, because fear is focused on something right in front of you - a real and objective danger.