Atychiphobia (Fear of Failure) Atychiphobia is an intense fear of failure.
It may cause you to put off or avoid any activity or scenario that has the potential for an unsuccessful outcome.
Someone with this condition may be scared to try new things, take risks or embrace growth for fear of failure.
Fear of failure may develop for many reasons, ranging from growing up with critical parents to bullying or a traumatic event.
If you’ve ever failed at something and wound up feeling humiliated or upset, these emotions may have stayed with you far beyond the initial incident.
Extreme fear of failure can affect mental health, relationships, and overall quality of life.
Other impacts of atychiphobia include: Avoidance of tasks, projects, opportunities, and even other people (out of perceived negative judgments and a sense of shame or disappointment) Low self-esteem.
People afraid of failure tend to run from things that can and may very well work for them and be a chance at a better life.
Such as relationships…
Doing this however, only sets them back on the same path they have always know.
The same failed results, wasted, time, hurt feelings and pain. Which makes them become guarded, often broken and empty inside… never any gains.
These are your weak people and true… They are failures.
The fear of change can stem from childhood experiences, familial views, personal outlooks, current conditions, and even just the way people are programmed.
For example, if someone grows up in a household that takes a negative worldview and is filled with cynicism.
This could breed fear and anxiety over trying something new.
This is especially common if your parents have dealt with trauma, abuse or poverty.
Their experiences may have created a worldview that promotes thinking that all paths are dangerous and filled with bad outcomes.
In that way, you have become programmed to be jaded and cynical as well.
Instead, it becomes easier to stick with what is known.
More so, humans are conditioned and naturally programmed to like to be in control.
It’s evolutionary. So, the fear of change is both an outcome of nature and nurture.
That being said, it can be managed and altered. It takes work to realize that at some point in life, everything was once an unknown.
It takes courage and action to move toward a path of positivity and beneficial outcomes.
That’s why it’s so necessary to work towards a mindset that can welcome and embrace change.