It Is OK to Be Fearless and Terrified at the Same Time

It Is OK to Be Fearless and Terrified at the Same Time is something I had to learn by living it.

Because for a long time, I believed courage meant not being afraid.

That if I felt fear, it meant I was not ready. Not strong enough. Not capable enough.

So I waited.

I waited to feel confident. I waited to feel certain. I waited for the fear to disappear before I made a move.

But what I learned is this.

Fear does not disappear before you act.

It comes with you.


Prefer to listen? The Audio Blog version is available here.


Fear and Courage Can Exist Together

We tend to think of fearlessness as the absence of fear.

But real fearlessness looks different.

It looks like showing up even when your heart is racing. Speaking even when your voice feels unsteady. Taking the step even when you are unsure of the outcome.

Fear and courage are not opposites.

They often exist in the same moment.

And when you understand that, something shifts.

You stop waiting for fear to leave.

And you start moving anyway.


I Had to Rethink What Strength Meant

There were moments in my life when I felt completely terrified.

Terrified to take risks. To speak up. To make changes that I knew I needed to make.

And in those moments, I questioned myself.

Why am I so afraid?
Why does this feel so hard?
What if I fail?

But looking back, those were often the moments that mattered most.

The moments where something inside me was pushing me forward, even as fear tried to hold me back.

That tension was not weakness.

It was growth.


Fear is information, Not a Stop Sign

Fear is not always something to avoid.

Sometimes it is simply information.

It tells you that you are stepping into something new. Something uncertain. Something that matters.

And while not all fear should be ignored, not all fear should be obeyed either.

Learning to tell the difference is powerful.

Because if you let fear make every decision, you will stay exactly where you are.

And growth rarely lives there.


You Do Not Have to Feel Ready

This was one of the biggest shifts for me.

I thought I needed to feel ready before I acted.

But readiness is not a feeling.

It is a decision.

You decide to show up. You decide to try. You decide to take the step, even when you are unsure.

And through that action, confidence begins to build.

Not before.

During.


Courage Builds Through Action

Every time you move forward while feeling afraid, you reinforce something important.

You can handle it.

You can move through discomfort. You can take risks. You can face uncertainty.

And each time you do, your trust in yourself grows.

Not because the fear disappears.

But because you prove to yourself that fear does not control you.


Growth Lives in That Tension

There is a space where fear and possibility meet.

A space where you feel both excited and uncertain. Hopeful and hesitant. Strong and vulnerable.

That space can feel uncomfortable.

But it is also where growth happens.

Because you are stretching beyond what is familiar.

You are stepping into something new.

And that requires both courage and vulnerability.


You Are Allowed to Feel Both

You do not have to choose between being fearless and being afraid.

You can be both.

You can feel terrified and still move forward. You can feel uncertain and still take action. You can feel doubt and still believe in yourself enough to try.

Those emotions do not cancel each other out.

They coexist.

And when you allow that, you remove the pressure to be perfect.

You simply show up as you are.


Keep Going Anyway

If you are waiting for the moment when fear disappears, you may be waiting longer than you think.

But if you are willing to move forward with it, everything changes.

Because the goal is not to eliminate fear.

It is to move through it.

To take the step. To say the thing. To try the thing. To trust yourself enough to see what happens next.

And that is where real courage lives.


SLAY Reflection

S — See the Fear
What is something in your life that feels both exciting and terrifying right now?

L — Look at the Meaning
What might that fear be telling you about what matters to you?

A — Accept the Feeling
Can you allow yourself to feel afraid without letting it stop you?

Y — Your Next Step
What is one action you can take even while feeling uncertain?


Call to Action: Join the Conversation

I’d love to hear from you.
Have you ever done something that scared you and felt stronger because you did it anyway?

Share your story in the comments. Let’s cheer each other on.

And if you know someone who might need this reminder, send this to them.
Sometimes, all we need is a nudge.

The Boogeyman Only Lives in the Dark

Fear has a way of creeping in when the lights are out—both literally and metaphorically. When we’re uncertain, overwhelmed, or vulnerable, our minds can convince us that the shadows hold monsters. And when we avoid shining a light on those fears—when we stuff them down, pretend they don’t exist, or try to outrun them—they only grow bigger, louder, and harder to face.

The truth? Fear feeds on silence and secrecy. When we leave it unchecked, it multiplies in the darkness of our minds. But when we turn on the light—through awareness, honesty, and courage—fear begins to shrink.

So if you think there’s a boogeyman around, it’s time to stop hiding under the covers. Flip the switch. Call it out. See it for what it is.


Darkness Is the Breeding Ground for Fear

Think about the last time you were afraid of something—really afraid. Chances are, it wasn’t the thing itself that scared you most. It was not knowing.

Not knowing what someone thought of you.
Not knowing how a situation would turn out.
Not knowing if you could survive the pain you were in.

The unknown is where fear lives. And the more we let our imagination run wild in that dark space, the more terrifying the “boogeyman” becomes.

But here’s the thing: most fears, when brought into the light, lose their power. Naming your fear is the first step in shrinking it. It’s not the monster under the bed—it’s your anxiety about failing, being rejected, or not being enough. Once you see it clearly, you can deal with it.


Shine the Light of Truth

When we start to shine a light on fear, it doesn’t mean the fear disappears overnight. But it does mean we stop letting it run the show.

For me, facing my fears meant getting rigorously honest with myself. I had to admit where I was scared and why. Sometimes it was rooted in old wounds or trauma. Sometimes it was tied to lies I had told myself for years. And sometimes, it was just the unknown of stepping into a new chapter.

The more light I brought in—the more I talked about my fears, wrote about them, or even prayed about them—the less they controlled me.

Fear thrives in the dark. Truth thrives in the light.


The Boogeyman Is Rarely What You Think

Most of the time, the “boogeyman” isn’t nearly as scary as we’ve built it up to be.

Maybe the conversation you’ve been avoiding brings clarity instead of rejection.
Maybe the risk you’ve been afraid to take opens a door you never thought possible.
Maybe the pain you’re carrying becomes lighter when you finally share it.

Fear wants you to stay in the dark. But your healing requires the light.


Flip the Switch

So how do you “turn on the light” when fear is looming?

  • Name it. Write down exactly what you’re afraid of. No filters.
  • Share it. Talk to someone you trust. Speaking fear out loud weakens it.
  • Challenge it. Ask yourself: is this fear based in fact, or in old stories?
  • Take one small action. Even the smallest step forward shines light into the dark.

The boogeyman can’t survive in the light.

So next time you feel fear creeping in, don’t stay stuck in the dark. Reach for the switch. Bring it into the open. Remind yourself: you are braver than the shadows.


SLAY Reflection

  1. What fear have you been keeping in the dark?
  2. How does avoiding it give it more power?
  3. What would shining a light on it look like for you?
  4. Can you trace your fear back to old wounds or beliefs?
  5. What’s one small action you can take today to face it?

S – Stop letting fear grow in silence
L – Let the light of truth guide you
A – Acknowledge your fears instead of hiding them
Y – Yield to courage, not the shadows


Call to Action: Join the Conversation

I’d love to hear from you.
What fear did you finally bring into the light—and how did it change things for you?
Share your story in the comments. Let’s cheer each other on.

And if you know someone who’s hiding from their “boogeyman,” send this to them.
Sometimes, all we need is a light to remind us we’re not alone.