By Jennifer Blanchard
Last week’s post discussed fear of success. Fear of success’ evil twin sister is fear of failure.
So what exactly is a fear of failure?
A fear of failure is often the most paralyzing of the four main things procrastinators fear. It causes people to avoid the things they want to do because they are afraid they will fail.
A procrastinator’s fear of failure can sometimes be so strong that they may even subconsciously undermine themselves so they don’t have to attempt something (or continue attempting it).
Oddly enough, by not attempting something (or attempting, but giving up quickly), you are essentially bringing about that which you’ve been fearing: failure.
So what causes procrastinators to fear failing?
“Often, this phobia is linked with early life causes, like demeaning parents or siblings, or traumatic events where a major embarrassment was the result of some minor failure,” according to the article, Fear of Failure, on way2hope.org.
Fear of failure can build up over a lifetime, getting progressively more paralyzing as the years go on–unless you do something about it.
Do You Fear Failure?
Although fear of failure may come from not having the skills or knowledge to do something, most of the time the fear is in your mind.
Here are some common signs that you fear failure:
- You avoid doing something if you know you won’t be able to do it well immediately.
- You don’t set goals; if you don’t set goals, you can’t fail.
- You procrastinate on the things you really want to do because you don’t believe you can do it.
- You live well below your potential (and know it).
- You never step outside your comfort zone.
- Your life is mediocre; it could be better, but why fix something that’s not broken?
- You only attempt things you know you’ll be good at.
- You sabotage yourself by procrastinating.
- Any time you want to attempt something new, you first play the scenario out in your mind. If you see your attempt ending in failure, criticism or ridicule, you don’t attempt it.
- You give up on things easily.
- You worry about being judged for not being able to do something well/perfect.
For more information on the causes of fear of failure, read:
- How Fear of Failure Destroys Success, by Adrian Savage
- Is Fear Causing You to Live Below Your True Potential?
The idea of failing can be scary, there’s no doubt. But isn’t the idea of never reaching your writing dreams scarier?
Action Steps:
- Accept Your Fear–This is the most important thing you can do for yourself. Failure in life is inevitable. It’s not possible for you to be amazing at something immediately. It’s not possible for you to achieve everything you want to achieve immediately. It takes time. It takes work.Once you can finally accept that failure is just a part of life, you’ll be able to turn your failure into amazing writing opportunities.
- Act–Since fear of failure immobilizes you, in order to overcome it, you need to take action. Go after your dreams; finally sit down and write that short story; finally submit your poem to a literary magazine; do something!Action gives you the ability to change the circumstances that hold you back.
- Keep At It–Ask any successful person and they’ll tell you they didn’t succeed after their first attempt. Hell, they might not have succeeded after their hundredth attempt! The point is, if you give up, failure is inevitable. But if you keep on trying, you’ll eventually get there.Whenever you feel yourself letting your fear of failure get the best of you, just ask yourself, “What would I attempt if I knew I couldn’t fail?”
- Treat Every Failure as a Learning Opportunity–Being successful in writing is all about learning what doesn’t work for you. Once you know what doesn’t work (from having failed a couple times), you can improve on the circumstance and eventually find what does work.
- Keep Believing–This is one of the most important things you can do for your writing career: Believe in yourself! Know that you can do this. Know that you will do this. Know that there’s no one better for the job than you.And no matter what, don’t let rejection kill your confidence.




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A subject not often publicized in the social media sphere. Some sensible thoughts here that serve as helpful reminders to writers, bloggers and anyone easily crippled by this phobia.
Thanks for sharing Jennifer.
This is a brilliant quote and great mantra I (and most people) must implement: “What would I attempt if I knew I couldn’t fail?”
@Autom You’re welcome.
@_kelly.king/Stinger839 I found a greeting card a couple years ago (by Quotable Cards) that had that quote on the front (marked as by anonymous). I framed it and have it sitting on my desk. Whenever I feel my fear of failure arise, I read the quote again.
The reason I personally fear failure, is letting my family down. And this has been a massive step for me to overcome personally. I have some big plans for this year and I cannot let failure stop me from stepping into this success.
@Free Blogging Ebook If your family loves and supports you (which I’m sure they do!), they would never think less of you for failing. They’re not perfect either. Tell yourself that whenever you fear disappointing them.
Maybe you should involve your family in your writing. Have them be your reliability buddies. Let them help you achieve your goals. It may help you overcome your fear.
It really is an uphill battle when you fear both failure and success – and I do.
I’m currently being frozen in place by how nit-picky critical everything to do with writing is. I’ve heard to shut off the internal editor and just write, but I’m having trouble doing that now that it’s been turned on by all the reading/studying I’ve been doing on how to write.
I think the only thing I’m going to feel I can write is back to my fanfiction . . . and I’m even getting uptight about that.
Sandra
@Sandra STOP reading/studying about how to write and just sit down and write! Living in an information society is fantastic because all the knowledge you could ever want is at your fingertips. However, for a procrastinating writer, it could mean disaster. Spending too much time reading/researching how to write, rather than just jumping in and writing, is counterproductive. By now you know enough about writing to write, so sit down and write!
One of the best and most important things you can do for yourself and your writing is ignore the criticism and just get the words on the page.
Write now, worry about editing/criticism later.
Thanks for this great advice. I’ve coined a phrase, Give Fear the Finger and I’m doing just that on my blog. It chronicles how I’m overcoming my fear of being read because it is in direct conflict with my goal of being a writer! I think people need to come out of the closet and get other people involved in their battle to succeed. Mutual support can only be a good thing. Check out http://inthehotspot.wordpress.com/ and let’s give fear the finger together. Good luck everyone:)