Faith, the other side of fear

Reason looks for proofs, seeks experiments and wants accuracy and predictability. Faith is belief without reason, without proof and without evidence or confirmation.
The art of delegating tasks is a glaring example of how faith operates. We commission duties to people instead of trying to control everything, lying awake at nights and going through imaginary, disastrous scenarios.
Most of the time, these imaginary scenarios seem so real in our head, that they overshadow the present time.
We end up living in a world that is inside our heads, completely detached from what is happening.
The antidote, as cliche as it might sound, is to live in the present moment. When we are neither worrying about the future, nor thinking about the past, we are in the “now” where life happens.
We are no longer allowing our heads to run faster than our feet.
Fear make us vulnerable. People who are in a constant state of fear are very malleable. They will hang on to any thread of hope, believe anything that would supposedly deliver them from the angst they feel.
When we fear, everything happens in our heads and our wild imagination rules us with its ghoulish and vivid images of doom and gloom.
Doubt, anguish and stress cloud our brain turning us into nervous wrecks.
When we act, we should not allow our thoughts to cloud our lives. The root of the issue is that we try to think and act at the same time. There should be a time allocated for thinking and another dedicated for action, these two should never happen at the same time.
When we act, we should not allow our thoughts to cloud our lives. The root of the issue is that we try to think and act at the same time. There should be a time allocated for thinking and another dedicated for action, these two should never happen at the same time.
When they do, we are like a ship with two captain, bound to sink or to get lost on the billowing wave of the bottomless sea.
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