8/90 Zero Limits: Fear In Disguise When Thinking Is Actually Avoidance
🔥🔥 Welcome everyone, to Day 8/90-day Zero Limit Sprint. We are on week two! And today is quite interesting. It's all around fear in disguise when thinking is actually avoidance. I know there'll be a few people who probably don't agree with that, but uh… keep listening, because we've got a way to go in this, uh, for today. One of the core truths around this is that fear rarely announces itself as fear. Fear pretends to be logic. And fear, always, always slows income if you're not using it or releasing it. Zero limits focus is to remember that decision restores your energy, And delay drains it. As we move into this week, I want to honour what's already happening. Many of these community members are really releasing these old patterns, not because you're forcing change, But because your nervous system is finally feeling safe. Safe enough to let go. And today, we gently uncover one of fear's favourite disguises. Fear rarely announces itself as fear. It pretends to be logical, and it sounds like things like… "I just need to think this through." " need more clarity." "I'll decide once I'm sure." Hands up, comment if this has ever been a thought that you've had. But the truth is, most people never learn that overthinking is often a trauma response. It's the mind stepping into protect the body from a perceived risk not a real one. But a remembered one So, when you find yourself thinking in circles, Nothing has gone wrong. Your system is simply trying to keep you safe. Safety doesn't come from more thinking. Clarity does not come before we take action. And we know this because so many of us…are looking for clarity…while we're taking steps forward and taking action, I know, so many have gone, oh my goodness, there's the clarity right there way after we started taking action steps. So, we know clarity does follow movement, Even the smallest movement tells the nervous system. I'm safe enough to proceed. So today, instead of asking, What's the right decision? Why don't you ask this?