“’The thing
that is in Room 101 is the worst thing in the world…The worst thing in the
world,’
said
O’Brien, ‘varies from individual to individual. It may be burial alive, or
death by fire, or by
drowning, or by impalement, or fifty other deaths. There are cases
where it is some quite trivial thing, not even fatal.’” (1984, p.283)
Fear has this creepy way of taking hold of us. There
is no feeling like it, and no feeling that trumps it. For Winston, his greatest
fear was rats, that they may crawl on his and gnaw off his face. For me, you
could basically name anything and chances are I’d be afraid of it or something
related to it. Some things on my phobia list: Whales, snake bites, getting
things in my eyes, being paralyzed… so the list goes on. If you were faced with
the scariest thing you know, what would you do to avoid it? Apparently anything,
such as betray the only person you’ve ever loved, as was the case in 1984. (Which, by the way, Winston lost
any pity I had for him by doing that. Jerk.)
But we usually think of fear as an individual affair,
a feeling that only we feel internally. But oftentimes we see a collective
fear, such as the fear of a group or of a nation. In 1984, there was an unspoken fear by the people not in the inner
party that the party would assassinate them at any moment. In the Middle East,
there is a collective fear and resulting anger of the masses against their
oppressive governments. As the article details, Japanese activists acted in the
way they did out of fear of China.
Actually when you think about it, we see fear in a lot
of governments’ actions. Japan’s not the only nation acting out of fear of
their opponents. We do it too. A lot of our government’s actions are based upon
the need to be a superpower, to be the best in something like energy,
education, or economic stability. This need, in turn, is fueled by fear. We
fear falling behind excelling nations like China, we fear instability like the
Arab Spring, we fear a gosh darn lot of things. Clearly fear is an excellent
motivator though, to influence our decisions and our actions to avoid that
which we fear— which in some cases is good, and other cases not so much.
This whole government issue doesn’t really feel like
it’s relevant to our teenage lives, so I’ll use a more suitable example for the
grand finale of this post. Next time you’re walking down the street and you are
faced with something you fear, (let’s say for this hypothetical, that you fear
goats) approach it like you’re not afraid. I want you to walk up to that goat
and yell “You don’t scare me goat!” and get reasonably up in its face. Let it
know that fear doesn’t rule your life, that unlike all those governments and
people like Winston that act out of fear, by golly, you don’t. Then walk off
with your head held high, because guess what? You sure showed that goat who’s
boss.
Wow. Sorry, that last part got kind of random and
weirdly dramatic… I guess that’s what fear does to you sometimes.

You know about my goat problem, right? My neighbor had a goat -- two actually -- so the prospect of running into a goat on my block is much higher than average.
ReplyDeleteI really liked reading this post, especially then end. I have a fear of getting things in my eyes to, not fun. I liked how you connected fear with the fear of our country falling behind. We try really hard at everything so we can be at the top of the world. You said fear was motivator, which i agree. So, fear is beneficial in way, right?
ReplyDeleteI guess if the fear is not of a paralyzing nature (ie PANIC) then yes, it can certainly be beneficial
DeleteThis is the best. It's adorable and relevant. You have such a great voice when you write!!
ReplyDeleteI thought this was just adorable:) Your usage of language realy makes ur argument superb!
ReplyDelete