30/12/2025
Your Nervous System Is Not Broken. It’s Trying to Protect You
Fear of flying is often misunderstood as a lack of logic or courage.
Clinically speaking, it is neither.
What you are experiencing is a protective response from the nervous system, one that has become overly vigilant. At some point, your brain learned to associate flying with threat, uncertainty, or loss of control. Once that association is made, the body does exactly what it is designed to do: it prepares you for danger.
This response is automatic, not deliberate.
It happens beneath conscious thought.
And crucially, it says nothing about your intelligence, strength, or rationality.
In fact, people who experience fear of flying are often highly perceptive, imaginative, and sensitive to risk. The problem is not that the nervous system is malfunctioning, it is that it has not yet been shown that flying is consistently safe for you at a felt, embodied level.
No amount of “telling yourself you’re fine” corrects this, because the nervous system does not respond to logic alone. It responds to experience, repetition, and emotional learning.
Here is the hopeful part.
Nervous systems are plastic.
They learn. They update. They can be retrained.
As we move out of 2025 and into 2026, this matters. Because fear does not need to be fought, suppressed, or endured forever. When the nervous system is guided properly, it can learn that flying is not an emergency, and when that happens, calm begins to appear naturally, without force.
This is not about becoming fearless.
It is about teaching your system that it no longer needs to work so hard to protect you.
And that is not only possible, it is something the human nervous system is exceptionally good at, when given the right conditions.
If fear of flying has been shaping your choices, 2026 can be the year that changes.
If you’re ready to understand your nervous system, rather than battle it, you’re welcome to reach out and start that conversation.