How to Build Courage in the Face of Fear | Brené Brown Motivation
Five concrete practices for turning fear into forward motion, grounded in behavioral research and real experience.
Overview
This piece breaks down why fear persists and how to systematically reduce its grip through specific, repeatable practices. It draws on research in emotion labeling, anxiety reframing, and social support to explain why courage is a skill, not a personality trait. The framework is practical and sequenced, moving from internal recognition to external community-building.
Key takeaways
Naming fear out loud or in writing measurably reduces its emotional intensity, per emotion-labeling research.
Fear and excitement produce identical physical sensations; the only difference is the story assigned to the feeling.
Perfectionism is not a high standard but a fear-avoidance mechanism that delays action indefinitely.
Vulnerability is the mechanism through which courage is built, not a weakness to overcome before taking action.
Courage requires community; isolation amplifies self-doubt while the right support system increases risk tolerance.
Worth quoting
"Courage isn't the absence of fear, it's what happens when we show up despite it."
"Perfectionism isn't protecting you, it's paralyzing you."
"We don't build courage by waiting until we feel brave, we build it by stepping forward while our hands are still shaking."
Talk to Us. First Call’s Free.
We’ll listen first. If we can’t help, we’ll say so.
Schedule a Conversation