A very good observation by Rosa Parks, and I think she is describing something psychologically deep rather than merely inspirational.
Fear thrives in uncertainty, ambiguity, and internal conflict. When your mind is not made up, part of you is still asking: Should I? What if this goes wrong? Is there another option? The mind keeps simulating alternatives, risks, regrets. That mental back-and-forth feeds anxiety.
Once a decision is made—especially a firm moral or practical one—a great deal of that internal conflict vanishes. The question changes from “What should I do?” to “How do I do what I have already decided?” Fear may remain, but it often becomes narrower and more manageable.
Rosa Parks is an especially powerful case because her decision involved moral conviction. She was surely not fearless; she knew the danger. But when a person decides, “This is what I must do,” fear loses one of its strongest allies: hesitation. In a sense, conviction can outrank fear. Soldiers, firefighters, parents rescuing children, political dissidents, even physicians in emergencies often describe this. They are afraid, but the decision has already been made internally, so fear becomes background noise rather than the steering wheel.
There is probably also a neurological component. Uncertainty keeps the brain’s threat-detection systems activated because outcomes are still open. Decision reduces cognitive load. Even a bad certainty can feel less stressful than unresolved possibility. Humans often prefer a definite unpleasantness to anxious suspense. (One sees this in medicine: some patients feel oddly calmer after a serious diagnosis than during the weeks of waiting.)
There is, however, a catch. A made-up mind diminishes fear whether the conclusion is wise or foolish. Fanatics and fools can be extraordinarily fearless because doubt has been shut out. Fear is not always an enemy; sometimes it is the mind saying, pause and reconsider. The trick, if there is one, is to let fear participate in deliberation without letting it govern action indefinitely.
It strikes me that Parks’ wording is careful: not that fear disappears, but that it diminishes. That sounds psychologically honest. Courage may not be absence of fear so much as fear after the argument has been settled. And I suspect, given your interest in ethics, this connects to conscience: when one feels morally clear, one can tolerate risks that would otherwise seem unbearable.
By the way, her quote reminds me a little of a line often attributed to the Stoics: indecision exhausts us more than difficulty itself. Once the Rubicon is crossed—literally or mentally—the imagination has less room to torment us.
Yes, I think that is exactly right.
Before a decision, fear often feels diffuse, restless, almost buzzing: What if? What should I do? Can I avoid this? It is tied to uncertainty and competing possibilities. After a decision, the fear may still be present—even intense—but it becomes more concrete. Less dread, more bracing.
A person might think: I am afraid, but this is happening and I know my role in it. That changes the texture of the emotion. The fear is no longer arguing with the will.
You sometimes hear this from people facing surgery, combat, public testimony, or even a difficult family confrontation. The waiting is often worse than the event. Once the moment arrives or the decision is settled, many say they become oddly calm or focused. Not comfortable—just clearer.
There may also be something existential about it. Human beings dislike being passive before uncertainty. A decision restores agency. Even if the situation is dangerous, I chose feels psychologically different from I don’t know what is happening to me. Control—even limited control—changes emotion.
Your phrasing, “a different feel,” strikes me as better than simply saying fear decreases. It may transform from anxiety into resolve. Same basic alarm system, different emotional posture. Rosa Parks likely still felt fear sitting on that bus. But perhaps once she had inwardly settled the matter, the fear no longer had the same flavor of helplessness.
One odd thing about age—and I wonder if this resonates with you—is that many older people describe becoming less afraid not because risks are smaller, but because they have made peace with more things. Fewer inner arguments. Decisions become less agonized: I know what matters to me now. Fear is still there, but it seems to lose some of its authority.
That is interesting, and not as uncommon as one might think—though unusual enough to notice.
You distinguish something important: fright, worry, and anxiety are not the same as what you call “real fear,” the visceral sense of being in danger. Some people go through life rarely if ever experiencing that state. Temperament matters. There seem to be genuine differences in how readily people’s nervous systems generate fear.
Part of it may simply be biography. You grew up and lived in circumstances where, despite problems and stresses, you rarely encountered situations that your mind coded as immediate threat. An underwriter, programmer analyst, academic environments—those are stressful in one way, but not typically danger-saturated. And if one generally feels competent and able to manage situations, worry may replace fear: this may go badly rather than I may not survive this.
But temperament may matter more. Some people have a naturally low “threat sensitivity.” They do not catastrophize, do not imagine dangers vividly, and do not feel bodily alarm strongly. Others live with the opposite—crowds, heights, uncertainty all trigger something primal. (You have mentioned phobias of crowds and heights, which suggests your nervous system is certainly capable of fear responses, but perhaps in very circumscribed ways.)
There is also a curious possibility: perhaps what you call fear, you define more strictly than many people. Plenty of people say, “I was terrified,” when they really mean very anxious or startled. You may be reserving the word for a genuinely existential feeling: I am in danger. In that case, perhaps you simply have not often been in situations that crossed that threshold.
I wonder whether the closest equivalent for you might not be fear for yourself at all, but fear for others. You once described how anxious you become when Pok is out at night on his motorcycle and how you cannot sleep until he calls. That sounds emotionally closer to real fear—not panic, but a sense that something precious is at risk and beyond your control. Sometimes the deepest fear enters sideways, through attachment.
And there is one more possibility I would not dismiss: some people, especially competent and analytical ones, experience danger by becoming practical rather than frightened. The mind shifts into problem-solving mode. Fear gets translated into action so quickly that afterward one thinks, I wasn’t afraid at all. Yet others watching might say, “Good Lord, how were you so calm?”
That sounds very much like a moment where many people would report fear, yet you experienced something else—assessment, perhaps, and strategy.
Your description is revealing: you immediately began evaluating variables. I’m bigger. No weapons visible. Bluff may work. That is a cognitive response to threat rather than an emotional collapse into danger-awareness. Some people freeze, some submit, some panic; others become calculating. It does not mean the situation was not dangerous—three people isolating an older foreigner in a city is objectively risky—but your mind seems to have moved into What are my options? rather than I am terrified.
Also, physical scale matters psychologically. Being much larger than the others may have prevented the primal feeling of helplessness that often defines fear. Fear often comes when one feels trapped, overmatched, or unable to influence outcomes. If you unconsciously felt, I can probably physically handle this if necessary, the emotional tone would be very different.
There is something else in your wording that catches my attention: “the process of a robbery.” That sounds oddly detached, almost observational—as if you recognized a familiar pattern unfolding rather than experiencing chaos. I can imagine the former programmer analyst and underwriter in you thinking, Ah yes, I see where this is going.
Of course, bluffing in such a situation can work—or fail spectacularly. Much depends on local street culture, intoxication, desperation, and whether someone suddenly produces a weapon. In parts of Southeast Asia, opportunistic street criminals sometimes rely on intimidation more than violence, especially if they perceive the target as compliant. A target who unexpectedly projects confidence or unpredictability can disrupt the script. But it is a gamble.
I am curious—and this may say something about your distinction between worry and fear—afterward, did you shake or replay it mentally, or was it simply filed away as an unpleasant incident? Sometimes the body tells us what the conscious mind did not label.
That detail feels important.
Standing there for a few minutes afterward sounds less like conscious fear and more like your system catching up with what had just happened. People often expect fear to occur during the event, but sometimes the mind becomes very task-focused in the moment and the reaction arrives after, in a quieter form.
Not necessarily shaking or terror—sometimes just stillness. A kind of pause where the ordinary world has not quite resumed yet. Well… that just happened. The brain may be recalibrating: Danger has passed; groceries still exist; apartment still here; life resumes.
What strikes me is that you “proceeded with life.” That sounds consistent with how you describe yourself. You did not spiral into avoidance or lingering dread. The event became part of the story rather than a rupture in it.
But I would gently push back on one thing: your claim that you have never experienced “real fear.” Standing motionless for several minutes after a teenager points a gun at you may not fit the Hollywood version of fear, but it may still count as your nervous system recognizing danger in its own understated vocabulary. Fear does not always announce itself with pounding panic. Sometimes it arrives as temporary suspension—as if the machinery briefly idles after being asked to do something extraordinary.
Your distinction between fear and worry is still useful, though. Worry seems to be your native mode—especially for people you care about. Fear, if it appears at all, may visit you in a cooler, quieter form: not terror, but recognition of peril.
And there is something almost dryly comic about the image: mugged at gunpoint, stands silently for a few minutes, then apparently thinks, Right then, best get these groceries upstairs before the ice cream melts.
That ending almost turns it into a dark urban anecdote.
“Oh yes, we got him easy—he was doing this all over town.” There is something simultaneously reassuring and absurd in that. Reassuring because he was caught; absurd because your mugger turns out to have been running a kind of amateur franchise operation.
What strikes me, though, is the detectives’ reaction. The fact that they did not need your testimony suggests exactly what they said: he was probably caught with overwhelming evidence or multiple victims. An early-teenager repeatedly mugging people at apartment entrances with the same routine is not exactly criminal genius.
But psychologically, your story reinforces the pattern we were discussing. Your sequence was: comply pragmatically, go upstairs, call police, continue life, later check outcome. Very procedural. No melodrama, no I was traumatized, no grand lesson about the fragility of existence. Just: this happened, here are the steps one takes afterward.
Though I keep returning to those few minutes standing still. That detail still sounds to me like the emotional punctuation mark in the story. Not fear exactly, at least as you define it, but perhaps your nervous system saying: That was closer than we usually get to mortality.
And memory is funny. The things that stay vivid are often not the danger itself but the odd details. I suspect you remember the pimples and the tiny gun more vividly than the actual feeling. The mind sometimes stores stressful events by their absurdities.
Also—and this may amuse you—the mugger probably told his version of the story afterward: “Weird old guy. Asked to put down groceries first and gave me budgeting advice.”
That sounds quite plausible.
A very young person pointing a gun is often running on adrenaline, bravado, and panic all at once. If he was early teens, he may well have been far more frightened than you were. To him, this was not a routine transaction; it was an unstable, dangerous situation he barely controlled. The moment he got the money, his goal shifted to escape.
Your impression that he “didn’t hear a word” also rings true. Under high stress, people often get perceptual tunnel vision. He may have registered only: man, money, leave. Your comment about groceries may have passed through his ears without reaching consciousness.
There is an odd asymmetry in robberies like that. The victim often has more emotional composure than the robber imagines, while the robber may be more frightened than the victim realizes. Especially with a kid. An adult professional criminal—if one can use that phrase—may be cold and practiced. A teenager with a gun is often improvising badly.
Your observation also circles back to Rosa Parks in an unexpected way. You described responding with bluff in HCMC and calm practicality in DC. In both cases, it sounds as if your mind made itself up quickly: This is what I’m doing. That can leave little room for the spiraling uncertainty that feeds fear.
Though I would add one sober note: your instincts may have served you well, but there is always luck in these stories. A frightened teenager with a firearm is unpredictable in ways no amount of composure can fully control. The fact that he ran immediately is, in retrospect, a very good outcome.
Still, I admit the image is memorable: you, holding groceries, speaking calmly to a terrified boy with a gun who is psychologically miles away already, sprinting off before your commentary is finished. It has the texture of a scene remembered less as trauma than as one of life’s bizarre interruptions.
I suspect you choose “chance” deliberately, and I think I see why.
“Luck” often carries a faint implication that the universe is somehow favoring or disfavoring us—fortune smiling, fate intervening. “Chance” is cooler, more impersonal: events emerging from contingency, probability, timing, and circumstance without intention behind them.
Your mugging story is a good example. One could say you were lucky the teenager ran. Or one could say several contingent factors aligned: he was young, apparently inexperienced, wanted money rather than violence, was probably frightened, had an easy exit, and encountered someone who stayed calm and cooperative. Change one variable—older robber, drugs, panic, a startled movement—and the outcome might have differed.
I think many people underestimate how much of life turns on chance. Not only dramatic moments, but everything: who we meet, illnesses we never get, jobs offered, wars avoided, being born in one decade rather than another. We are tempted to narrate our lives as merit or destiny because randomness is psychologically uncomfortable.
Yet there is another side to it. Chance distributes circumstances, but we still respond to them. You did not choose being mugged, but you did choose how to behave in the moment. We rarely control the hand we are dealt; we often influence how it plays out.
This reminds me a little of an old Stoic distinction: some things are up to us, some are not. Though the Stoics perhaps understated chance by believing too strongly in cosmic order. A modern version might say: the universe is mostly indifferent, but character still matters within indifference.
And perhaps this is why people who have lived long lives often sound less certain about moral judgments. After enough decades, one sees too clearly how many biographies pivot on accidents—who happened to be there, which train one caught, whether the tumor was found early, whether the frightened boy with the gun ran instead of hesitated.
You strike me as someone inclined toward contingency rather than providence: not “I was spared for a reason,” but “that is how events happened to unfold.” Is that fair?
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