07/11/2025
Sometimes a fear begins its journey in one place, and ends up somewhere completely different.
Imagine two trains passing each other at the same moment.
On one train, something painful happens, heartbreak, illness, loss. On the other, you’re flying, or driving, or doing something entirely unrelated. But as those two trains rush past, your subconscious, always alert, always trying to protect you, mixes up the tracks.
Now the fear that belonged to the first train has quietly jumped onto the other one.
Months or years later, you find yourself afraid of flying, or travelling, or something that never used to bother you. You tell yourself it’s irrational, but it isn’t. It’s associative conditioning: your brain linking two events that happened at the same time and deciding they’re the same danger.
The amygdala, the brain’s alarm system, doesn’t care about logic or timelines. It just remembers: this felt bad, avoid it.
That’s why so many intelligent, capable people find themselves stuck with fears that make no sense. They’re not weak. Their minds are simply doing their best to protect a heart that once hurt deeply.
The beautiful part?
Once you see how the trains got switched, once you realise where the fear really began, you can gently move it back to its rightful track.
Because what was learned in fear can be unlearned in safety.