Thursday, January 31, 2013

Fri, Feb 1 day 5, 3rd (last) blog topic






Last blog: something for the imagination.
http://www.ted.com/talks/karen_thompson_walker_what_fear_can_teach_us.html

This topic should inspire more self-reflection; nevertheless, draw specifically from the video / transcript with your minimum of 200 response. Don't forget to identify yourself, so as to get credit for your writing.


One day in 1819, 3,000 miles off the coast of Chile, in one of the most remote regions of the Pacific Ocean, 20 American sailors watched their ship flood with seawater. They'd been struck by a sperm whale, which had ripped a catastrophic hole in the ship's hull. As their ship began to sink beneath the swells, the men huddled together in three small whaleboats. These men were 10,000 miles from home, more than 1,000 miles from the nearest scrap of land. In their small boats, they carried only rudimentary navigational equipment and limited supplies of food and water. These were the men of the whaleship Essex, whose story would later inspire parts of "Moby Dick."
Even in today's world, their situation would be really dire, but think about how much worse it would have been then. No one on land had any idea that anything had gone wrong. No search party was coming to look for these men. So most of us have never experienced a situation as frightening as the one in which these sailors found themselves, but we all know what it's like to be afraid. We know how fear feels, but I'm not sure we spend enough time thinking about what our fears mean.
As we grow up, we're often encouraged to think of fear as a weakness, just another childish thing to discard like baby teeth or roller skates. And I think it's no accident that we think this way. Neuroscientists have actually shown that human beings are hard-wired to be optimists. So maybe that's why we think of fear, sometimes, as a danger in and of itself. "Don't worry," we like to say to one another. "Don't panic." In English, fear is something we conquer. It's something we fight. It's something we overcome. But what if we looked at fear in a fresh way? What if we thought of fear as an amazing act of the imagination, something that can be as profound and insightful as storytelling itself?
It's easiest to see this link between fear and the imagination in young children, whose fears are often extraordinarily vivid. When I was a child, I lived in California, which is, you know, mostly a very nice place to live, but for me as a child, California could also be a little scary. I remember how frightening it was to see the chandelier that hung above our dining table swing back and forth during every minor earthquake, and I sometimes couldn't sleep at night, terrified that the Big One might strike while we were sleeping. And what we say about kids who have fears like that is that they have a vivid imagination. But at a certain point, most of us learn to leave these kinds of visions behind and grow up. We learn that there are no monsters hiding under the bed, and not every earthquake brings buildings down. But maybe it's no coincidence that some of our most creative minds fail to leave these kinds of fears behind as adults. The same incredible imaginations that produced "The Origin of Species," "Jane Eyre" and "The Remembrance of Things Past," also generated intense worries that haunted the adult lives of Charles Darwin, Charlotte BrontĂŤ and Marcel Proust. So the question is, what can the rest of us learn about fear from visionaries and young children?
Well let's return to the year 1819 for a moment, to the situation facing the crew of the whaleship Essex. Let's take a look at the fears that their imaginations were generating as they drifted in the middle of the Pacific. Twenty-four hours had now passed since the capsizing of the ship. The time had come for the men to make a plan, but they had very few options. In his fascinating account of the disaster, Nathaniel Philbrick wrote that these men were just about as far from land as it was possible to be anywhere on Earth. The men knew that the nearest islands they could reach were the Marquesas Islands, 1,200 miles away. But they'd heard some frightening rumors. They'd been told that these islands, and several others nearby, were populated by cannibals. So the men pictured coming ashore only to be murdered and eaten for dinner. Another possible destination was Hawaii, but given the season, the captain was afraid they'd be struck by severe storms. Now the last option was the longest, and the most difficult: to sail 1,500 miles due south in hopes of reaching a certain band of winds that could eventually push them toward the coast of South America. But they knew that the sheer length of this journey would stretch their supplies of food and water. To be eaten by cannibals, to be battered by storms, to starve to death before reaching land. These were the fears that danced in the imaginations of these poor men, and as it turned out, the fear they chose to listen to would govern whether they lived or died.
Now we might just as easily call these fears by a different name. What if instead of calling them fears, we called them stories? Because that's really what fear is, if you think about it. It's a kind of unintentional storytelling that we are all born knowing how to do. And fears and storytelling have the same components. They have the same architecture. Like all stories, fears have characters. In our fears, the characters are us. Fears also have plots. They have beginnings and middles and ends. You board the plane. The plane takes off. The engine fails. Our fears also tend to contain imagery that can be every bit as vivid as what you might find in the pages of a novel. Picture a cannibal, human teeth sinking into human skin, human flesh roasting over a fire. Fears also have suspense. If I've done my job as a storyteller today, you should be wondering what happened to the men of the whaleship Essex. Our fears provoke in us a very similar form of suspense. Just like all great stories, our fears focus our attention on a question that is as important in life as it is in literature: What will happen next? In other words, our fears make us think about the future. And humans, by the way, are the only creatures capable of thinking about the future in this way, of projecting ourselves forward in time, and this mental time travel is just one more thing that fears have in common with storytelling.
As a writer, I can tell you that a big part of writing fiction is learning to predict how one event in a story will affect all the other events, and fear works in that same way. In fear, just like in fiction, one thing always leads to another. When I was writing my first novel, "The Age Of Miracles," I spent months trying to figure out what would happen if the rotation of the Earth suddenly began to slow down. What would happen to our days? What would happen to our crops? What would happen to our minds? And then it was only later that I realized how very similar these questions were to the ones I used to ask myself as a child frightened in the night. If an earthquake strikes tonight, I used to worry, what will happen to our house? What will happen to my family? And the answer to those questions always took the form of a story. So if we think of our fears as more than just fears but as stories, we should think of ourselves as the authors of those stories. But just as importantly, we need to think of ourselves as the readers of our fears, and how we choose to read our fears can have a profound effect on our lives.
Now, some of us naturally read our fears more closely than others. I read about a study recently of successful entrepreneurs, and the author found that these people shared a habit that he called "productive paranoia," which meant that these people, instead of dismissing their fears, these people read them closely, they studied them, and then they translated that fear into preparation and action. So that way, if their worst fears came true, their businesses were ready.
And sometimes, of course, our worst fears do come true. That's one of the things that is so extraordinary about fear. Once in a while, our fears can predict the future. But we can't possibly prepare for all of the fears that our imaginations concoct. So how can we tell the difference between the fears worth listening to and all the others? I think the end of the story of the whaleship Essex offers an illuminating, if tragic, example. After much deliberation, the men finally made a decision. Terrified of cannibals, they decided to forgo the closest islands and instead embarked on the longer and much more difficult route to South America. After more than two months at sea, the men ran out of food as they knew they might, and they were still quite far from land. When the last of the survivors were finally picked up by two passing ships, less than half of the men were left alive, and some of them had resorted to their own form of cannibalism. Herman Melville, who used this story as research for "Moby Dick," wrote years later, and from dry land, quote, "All the sufferings of these miserable men of the Essex might in all human probability have been avoided had they, immediately after leaving the wreck, steered straight for Tahiti. But," as Melville put it, "they dreaded cannibals." So the question is, why did these men dread cannibals so much more than the extreme likelihood of starvation? Why were they swayed by one story so much more than the other? Looked at from this angle, theirs becomes a story about reading. The novelist Vladimir Nabokov said that the best reader has a combination of two very different temperaments, the artistic and the scientific. A good reader has an artist's passion, a willingness to get caught up in the story, but just as importantly, the readers also needs the coolness of judgment of a scientist, which acts to temper and complicate the reader's intuitive reactions to the story. As we've seen, the men of the Essex had no trouble with the artistic part. They dreamed up a variety of horrifying scenarios. The problem was that they listened to the wrong story. Of all the narratives their fears wrote, they responded only to the most lurid, the most vivid, the one that was easiest for their imaginations to picture: cannibals. But perhaps if they'd been able to read their fears more like a scientist, with more coolness of judgment, they would have listened instead to the less violent but the more likely tale, the story of starvation, and headed for Tahiti, just as Melville's sad commentary suggests.
And maybe if we all tried to read our fears, we too would be less often swayed by the most salacious among them. Maybe then we'd spend less time worrying about serial killers and plane crashes, and more time concerned with the subtler and slower disasters we face: the silent buildup of plaque in our arteries, the gradual changes in our climate. Just as the most nuanced stories in literature are often the richest, so too might our subtlest fears be the truest. Read in the right way, our fears are an amazing gift of the imagination, a kind of everyday clairvoyance, a way of glimpsing what might be the future when there's still time to influence how that future will play out. Properly read, our fears can offer us something as precious as our favorite works of literature: a little wisdom, a bit of insight and a version of that most elusive thing -- the truth. Thank you. (Applause)

136 comments:

  1. Today's subject is fear. I find the way that the speaker breached this subject highly effective -not in that she referenced the origins of moby dick, I feel that that wasn't really necessary- it was her actual point that was interesting and simple enough for me to grasp. While I don't agree that I've been conditioned to shed my fears, I concede that they grow and change as I do, and that I've never really considered them to be an asset. As soon as she said fear can be a story, I knew exactly what she meant. I immediately thought of glowing red eyes floating in the darkness; something I admit I still sometimes fear I'll find when turning a corner in my house late at night. Never is my imagination so active as when designing personal and usually improbable torments for me. If I were to transcribe in detail the irrational paranoia I sometimes feel when alone in the dark, perhaps I'd discover I'm the Mary Shelley of our generation. Perhaps to think of my fear as a story rather than what it really is, would lead to having an easier time banishing the irrational conclusions I draw when I wondering what will happen to me. Then again, I doubt anything is more effective in bolstering my balls than the presence of nearby attractive women I wish to impress. But when no one is around...its story time.

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    1. Nah'Tivah Ross
      I disagree with the fact that the Moby dick story was unnecessary, i felt that it was a good way to start off the speech. I felt that she was trying to give us an example and put us in the story so we could understand how our fears really mess with our personality. Speaking for myself it really worked because I imagined myself in that boat like WTF would I do. However i wasn't familiar with the story prior to hearing this speech. Furthermore I agree with the fact that as people grow older there fears change as they learn and experience new things.

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  2. Grace LL
    Response to Karen Thompson Walker

    I found Karen Thomson Walker's talk really interesting, once we got past the moby dick, men lost at sea part. When she said " We know how fear feels, but I'm not sure we spend enough time thinking about what our fears mean", I was like wow, yeah. Why do I sprint home as fast as I can from my friends house two doors down at night? I know my neighborhood is safe, and that I can be pretty sure nothing can happen to me, so what does this mean? Karen Walker's speech made me think a lot and question what it is that I fear the most and why. One main thing that popped up in my mind is failure, I fear failure, and I mean I think everyone does in some way through out their life but a lot of the time I think I fear it because I know it's coming sooner or later. When she talked about fears having plots, a beginning a middle and an end, something clicked. I fear not getting into colleges I want, and then not getting the education I need to make a career and be successful in something and then not having a plan or a future blah blah blah. Now I know this won't happen, maybe I wont end up at my dream school but I know i'll be okay, but there's also that fear of failure deep down in whatever you do I think. I also really connected to when she specking about how a lot of fear is the suspense and thought of the future, like I was saying about college and my life after high school. " Once in awhile our fears can predict our future" GREAT. This totally makes sense, I fear failing a test and I fail it. Maybe that's not what she meant when she said that but it's interesting to think about how your fears can change your life and how you live day by day. All in all I really liked Karen Walker's speech, it made me think about things I don't really like to think about, but it got this great reflection on my life out of it...

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    1. I disagree with Grace only because i found the Moby Dick part interesting but i guess that is opinion based. I felt as if i was really there with the sailors as she described the horrors of their voyage and how difficult this trip would be. As grace continued on i began to agree more because i also thought of failure when i heard Walker speak. I thought of my parents and how if i did not get into college i would be looked upon as failure. I thought of not being able to pursue my career of choice and living a life i completely regretted.

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    2. I agreed with Grace on this about the Moby Dick analogy. I found it unnecessary because I found the topic very easy to understand without it. I also liked how you talked about your fear of failure and not getting into college.” fear is the suspense” I liked how this was put, because I feel as though people fear the unknown like where you are going to be five years from now keeps people up at night. Especially senior year as you are waiting to hear make from colleges.

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  3. This speech by Karen Thompson Walker gave me a new outlook on what fear can be. For example, I never thought about fears being thought as another way of storytelling because I never realized they had plots. One statement I can agree with Karen is," In other words, our fears make us think about the future" which made me start to think that we can almost control our future. I also agree with fears having consequences because in the story Karen told she said," After much deliberation, the men finally made a decision. Terrified of cannibals, they decided to forgo the closest islands" which basically controlled their future. They eventually took the long route to reach land and when they were found, more than half the crew already starved to death. One thing that stood out to me in this speech was that in the other videos the speakers were not reading anything off of paper even when they were telling stories. But in this video it took me awhile to realize why she kept looking down instead of at the audience.

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  4. I enjoyed this TED talk the most out of the three we have watched. It had such a novel message, and really made me think about life in a way I had never thought about it before. The way that Walker uses her experience in writing fiction to describe her thoughts about fear is genius, and very riveting. Even just the way she told the story about the men stranded at sea was exciting, and when she used it to explain her theory about fear and stories I was hooked. I thought about how I've been affected by the immediate fear that she describes, and how I have neglected more long-term fear. I also thought about how this idea can be applied to much larger entities, such as nations and cultures. Terrorism and America come to mind, with terrorism playing the part of "artistic fear." Our nation is haunted by the thought of terrorists attacking us again, and usually hold that fear much higher than something like a climate crisis or an economic disaster. This is probably because of what Walker said, that we can vividly imagine a terrorist attack a lot easier than imagining a recession. I loved this TED talk.

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    1. "novel message"- I enjoyed that pun

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    2. It's interesting that you bring up how we are afraid as an entire country. It's so true. We jump at the thought of terrorism or someone who even looks like a terrorist. We replay 9/11 over and over again until we feel as if we're back in the moment. It's expected that we are cautious, but it becomes a problem when people are so paranoid that they won't even associate with a foreigner. So so sad.

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    3. Nah'Tivah
      I also think it’s interesting how you brought up tourism. We don’t say it but we all are really afraid of terrorists striking again. In my opinion i think we spend way too much time, money, and energy trying to contain terrorists outside the country when we need to focus on what’s going on at home. The vision of 9/11 was so terrifying that we are trying to stop it from occurring again and aren’t paying much attention to what’s going on right in our backyard. I heard once heard a quote that I’ll never forget and I know we all know it “there is nothing to fear, but fear itself…” I love that quote because it is absolutely true also I loved this ted talk.

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  5. Quinton Smith
    A long time ago, I heard someone say that fear is an acronym that stands for False Evidence Appearing Real. I’m not sure why this random acronym stuck with me but it does. I noticed everything that she said was a “rumor” or something that they heard. I’m not sure how I feel about her comparison of fears and stories, but on the other hand I feel like she brings a lot of things that haven’t thought about to light. She said fears have beginnings, middles, and ends. I don’t agree with that because althought I don’t think that a lot of things are considered scary to me, the things that do make me uncomfortable are that ones that don’t conclude, or is missing a part to it. I am the type of person that won’t do something unless I know or can find out how it starts, what will happen, and what the result will be. Some people say that is cowardly but I thing that it’s common sense. This is my version of the productive paranoia maybe. It caught my attention how she explained that people are creatures that are concerned about their future. I always say that I’m not scared of much because I’m not scared to die, and that’s because when I’m dead I won’t feel it. I feel like a hypocrite when I’m driving down and icy street and I go to put on my brakes and my car doesn’t stop and my pants are seconds away from being soiled. I aint bout dat life apperantly.

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    1. Jonathan to Quinton

      You are not about that life indeed my friend, but I liked the way you used a real life story to compare it to what Karen was talking about. When you said you weren’t scared to die, the moment your car started slipping on icy pavement, some panic probably set in and you didn’t want to die in that moment. You didn’t know what was going to happen but you knew something was going to happen. You said you didn’t really know how you felt about her comparison of fears and stories. Think about it this way as Karen said “Just like all great stories, our fears focus our attention on a question that is as important in life as it is in literature: what will happen next?” Being that I also have personal experience of losing control on icy roads, I know first-hand that I thought what will happen next? As you read a book and things get suspenseful is that a question that pops in your head? That is what she means when she compares stories to fear.

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    2. I agree with qouinton when he said "I’m not scared of much because I’m not scared to die, and that’s because when I’m dead I won’t feel it" because i have plenty of near death accidents. which caused me to just enjoy life as it is and not worry about death because after death you wont be able to do anything anyways.

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    3. I to agree with Quinton when he made the statement "I’m not scared of much because I’m not scared to die, and that’s because when I’m dead I won’t feel it". I feel like that statement itself makes a lot of sense. During the video I like how Karen expressed her feelings at a certain time and moment and I feel that you did that. When you go on to talk about being a hypocrite and your pants almost being soiled I found that to be funny and also a great way of expressing how you were feeling.

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    4. I really enjoyed reading your response it made me laugh. I agree with you though. “…but on the other hand I feel like she brings a lot of things that haven’t thought about to light.” I feel like Karen Thompson enlightened her listens to a new way to approach fear. I feel that Karen Thompson made fear seem unreal and irrational and your statement “I don’t agree with that because although I don’t think that a lot of things are considered scary to me, the things that do make me uncomfortable are that ones that don’t conclude, or is missing a part to it. I am the type of person that won’t do something unless I know or can find out how it starts, what will happen, and what the result will be. Some people say that is cowardly but I thing that it’s common sense. This is my version of the productive paranoia maybe.” Is exactly how I feel. Though she made very valid points the sailors fears were understandable.

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  6. I liked how Karen Thompson Walker approached the subject of fear. I did not really like how she started it though. It did not capture my attention at first. Actually I was quite confused on where she was going when she started to refer to Moby Dick. I love the way she connected storytelling and fear. When she says, “It's a kind of unintentional storytelling that we are all born knowing how to do. And fears and storytelling have the same components. They have the same architecture. Like all stories, fears have characters. In our fears, the characters are us. Fears also have plots. They have beginnings and middles and ends,” it made me think of fear in a diferent way. Like she said in the beginning of her speech “we’re often encouraged to think of fear as a weakness…” I like how she said that we are told to discard our fears as children as if they were baby teeth and roller skates. However, we live with ours fears majority/ all of our lives. Walkers speech help bring light to our own fears. Her speech overall was very effective, although I think she should an anecdote or a more personal experience of fear to help connect with her audience more.

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    1. Tara to Chantel
      I actually thought Karen Thompson Walker's speech started off strong and it caught my attention right away. Like you said, I also loved the way she connected storytelling and fear. It was so unexpected for me because I have never in my life thought that the two could go together. I disagree with you when you say that she should have had a personal experience of fear because at the beginning of her talk she says, "I remember how frightening it was to see the chandelier that hung above our dining table swing back and forth during every minor earthquake, and I sometimes couldn't sleep at night, terrified that the Big One might strike while we were sleeping". That example of hers really allowed me to visualize what she was seeing as a young child.

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    2. George @ Chantel

      I Agree with Tara about the beginning of the speech. The Extended metaphor of the whaling ship was an extremely strong way to put an image with the points about fear that Thompson is trying to get across. I also think that fears shouldn't be discarded because they are much more an instinct than an emotion. Fear makes you react which is what sets apart from most emotions. However, I like the comparison of fear to storytelling. It is a very individualized instinct and everyones stories or fears are different. But I do believe that fear is a good thing both as a motivator as Thompson suggests and also as a restrictor to keep your body safe in most situations.

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  7. Shaquan leach
    I think everyone does in some way throughout their life think that fear as stories. When she talked about fears having plots, a beginning a middle and an end, Just as if you were telling a story. My story is I fear of not getting into any colleges at all and then not getting the education I need to make a career and be successful in something and then not having a plan on what to do with my life. I know this won't happen, but maybe I won’t get to go to my dream school but I know I’ll be okay, for it is a fact that I have a backup plan in the middle of my story that will take me through to the end of my story. But I don’t think that it is the fear that that your being continues about but how you’re going to overcome that fear in your way.

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    1. I liked her opinion as well as fear being stories with plots, beginnings, middles and ends ect.as far as your fear that is tough but you can not let your mind control you fears, you have to overcome that and keep working hard. But you didn't really reflect much on the speech itself, it was nice to hear what your fear was but a better connection on what you learned or specific quotes would of helped you out.

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  8. This was thought provoking. I am a very strong proponent of optimism in the human race, ans I was pleasantly surprised to hear that we are "hard-wired" to think in suck a manner. I expend a lot of energy ensuring that things don't bring my attitude down, so the though of accepting fear, which I previously conceived as a negative force, is a weird one. I expected this speech to be taken in a direction that would offer fear as a safety mechanism, on that could protect us from harm and ensure that we don't die too young. I would have had more trouble agreeing with that; I believe some of the best experiences available can only be achieved through ignoring or facing your fears. The idea that fears have influenced and molded some of the most creative intellects in human history though, is an interesting one. I wouldn't argue that a degree of paranoia is necessary in a creative genius, rather that the open minds that artists usually have may be more susceptible to paranoia and the maintaining of childhood fears. Regardless, it's a cool idea. I'm going to have to read Moby Dick now.

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    1. Zach responding to Ryder
      I agree with what you said about optimism. I was also really happy to hear someone say how we are a very optimistic society. when hearing the title, like you did, I also assumed that it would be more of how to coup with fear, and not so much how to use it to propel yourself forward into great things, and I'm also thinking of grabbing the family copy of Moby dick, now.

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    2. "Suck a manner" indeed. I think you and Ms. Walker have similar ideas about fear but she may have expressed it differently than you've been used to. I think that she is suggesting that we do ignore or face our fear. Part of facing a fear is acknowledging that it exist so thinking of your fears in a more positive way could be a step in overcoming it. I also believe it is interesting that humans are optimistic by nature but a little taste of paranoia is healthy. It's always good to have some foresight.

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    3. George @ Ryder and Elijah

      I also like being an optimist when looking at the human race. I also think that fear is a safety for us that is an instinct. When we are presented with situations where fear is involved we usually make choices that result in the least amount of personal and mental injury. This leads me to think that fear is a good thing and that we should learn from out fears but maybe never truly never overcome them. Yes its true that our fears evolve and that we become afraid of different things as we grow older. But take the bodies reaction to trauma as an example of how our fears can still be there and are just triggered when something our of the normal has happened. After major injuries people tend to be more careful and this is because they are afraid they are going to get hurt again. The fear is the bodies defense mechanism that tells the brain “Hey don't do anything dumb like that again.” So I think that fear is a good thing and should be embraced in peoples lives.

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    4. I agree with you on how we must face our fears in order to gain the best achievements, Ryder. Some fears we have are able to faced and obsoleted in order to find out something interesting for personal gain. The best things our life is missing out on is hide behind our fears at times. Some of need thrill in our lives, and some of us need risk. It's what gives us the best out of life SOMETIMES.

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  9. Karen Thompson presented this topic of fear and the true value of human fear. In the video, she analyzed the meaning of fear and found what I believe to be a more profound definition. She displayed different examples of fear and how the human mind copes with fear. She makes reference to the story of Moby Dick and how the sailors' fear of cannibalism actually became reality. I think Karen Thompson brought up a good point about how to read a story or in other words, how to actually control your fears. She stated, “A good reader has an artist's passion, a willingness to get caught up in the story, but just as importantly, the readers also needs the coolness of judgment of a scientist, which acts to temper and complicate the reader's intuitive reactions to the story." Had the sailors looked at their fears more logically, they could have easily avoided the actual cannibalism. I agree with Karen, many people are optimistic. Sometimes optimism can be a form of denial. Sometimes our fear can have an imagination of its own and these imaginations become more vivid as our fear grows. The way to take control of our fears is to do as Karen Thompson say, read them as a scientist and an artist. I think everyone has a fear of failing. Sometimes, that is the fear that holds us back from the truth or pushes us to do something astounding. After watching this video, I've learned that fear is more than just a feeling but something that guides you through life.


    Jessica Vongxay

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  10. Although Mrs. Parker warned us that this talk might be our least favorite, I found this most interesting. This speech delved deeper not into current issues and the tragedy of war, but of the creatures that cause them; humans. To me this speech was the most applicable to anyone, because she urged a sort of self-reflection in her audience. When she talked about her fears of earthquakes as a child, I visualized the chandelier swinging back and forth, and remembered by deep routed fear as a child (aliens). Although this now seems insane, I still remember the terrible green-tinged nightmares that woke me up for months as a kid. I think her point in telling the story that inspired Moby Dick and her point about are fears is that instead of trying to slough them off as a weakness, we should detach ourselves from them and then use them as a sort of fuel to both prevent, prepare, and accept that our fears are possibilities, but know that we have control. We can change our own futures if we start now. I really loved how she brought up real things to be afraid of that people often aren’t (clogged arteries, global warming), because it reminded me of a documentary in Health that we recently watched. Two men walked down one of the most “dangerous” LA streets and nothing happened to them. Meanwhile, they explained that the pollution in the air, clogging up LA itself is more dangerous to everyone than the street will ever be. But instead we choose to give in to our imaginations, just as we did as kids. We’re not afraid of what we don’t hear about and don’t see every day on the news. I also noticed another connection: the men in the story she told were afraid of human cannibals, and so they chose a different course. They literally became their own worst nightmare. And in real life we chose to focus on “dangerous” people and violence, which only feeds into paranoia and scared people, which then CREATES dangerous people. It’s a vicious cycle. And the only thing we really become afraid of is ourselves, humans. This is counterproductive, because we may not be able to control earthquakes and aliens, but we can control our minds and the choices we make. And I think she’s right- if we all started looking at our fears subjectively, we would be so much less afraid of the things we faced and so much more willing to overcome them.
    I feel like there's so much I could talk about with this speech, but I won't. i just really enjoyed this.

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    1. I appreciate the main focus of your response, that is, the relevance of this particular speech to the average student. As let's admit it, we all have or have once had irrational fears and depending on what we dread the most, they can cloud or clear our judgement. Your particular allusion to global warming and clogged arteries was refreshing in a sense, simply because it reminded me that we need to focus on the real terrors in the world, not simply the most vivid or easy to imagine, in order to hone in on our foresight potential. Mentioning the vicious cycle was also astonishingly insightful, I had not imagined the possibility that paranoia could fuel the very thing that we are afraid of, however, it is perfectly logical. After all, that is exactly what happened to the men aboard the S-6 whaling ship, as they let their paranoia turn them into the very thing they feared the most.

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  11. George’s response

    Karen Thompson Walker takes and extremely unique view of fear in this TED Talk. She explains the basic idea of fear and how it can affect our lives. Fear is not an emotion but a human instinct that happens constantly to us. Our fears grow and change as we grow older and this is partly because of what we learn as we mature. We fear the unknown, as Walker explains when she talks about her fears if the world slowed down. She said “What would happen to our days? What would happen to our crops? What would happen to our minds?” All of these questions are in the future tense and all show that her uncertainties about the future cause her fear. Walker says that fears are just stories and that if we can read them we will be able to make the right decision. But how do we know what is the right choice in a case such as the stranded sailors. They chose a fear of starvation over a fear of cannibals and they died because of it. But they could have just as easily died by being eaten by cannibals but they didn’t choose that route so we don’t know how it would have turned out that way. While I agree with walker that if we can read our fears we can make good decisions. But I also think our fears are there for a reason. Fear is an instinct which means we do it naturally so fear is a good thing if left unchecked.

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    1. "Fear is not an emotion but a human instinct that happens constantly to us. Our fears grow and change as we grow older and this is partly because of what we learn as we mature. We fear the unknown..." I like everything that you said word for word. This is an interesting way to say that people are born to know that things are on earth that will try to harm your well being. It bothers me a bit though because sometimes I let my fears limit my abilities.

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    2. Your writing bring out the thoughts to many individuals (well to me anyway). I like how you mentioned"Fear is not an emotion but a human instinct that happens constantly to us. Our fears grow and change as we grow older and this is partly because of what we learn as we mature. We fear the unknown...". Fear is definitely not an emotion and I feel like you really have been in situations in order to make this statement. Everything isn't taught in life a lot of thing are learned and I think you really made a good point.

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  12. Zachary Jaeckel-Rizzo
    Mrs. Parker
    Journalism
    01 February 2013

    The topic to blog about today is fear, which right off the bat got me interested, because, just like she brought up at the beginning, I was brought up that having fear was, well, something to fear, and to this day, I’m still not the most courageous person you’ll meet, but I have come to terms with what I fear. I still to this day have a fear of rollercoasters, that can get so bad that I have had panic attacks where I’ve almost blacked out. Now, it is true that my fear of rollercoasters is nowhere near as desperate as the men whose boat was capsized by a sperm whale. Karen Thompson Walker then switches things up and interchanges the word fear, for story. Thinking about this, it works. I just told a story about how I almost blacked out from the tall drop I could have been launched from. Fears can become so vivid, like when child wakes up to tell you a nightmare of skeletons and other horrors, he is retelling a story his mind created, but at that same time, we are also the readers of the fears, as well as the writers. Now fears can be deep rooted into someone’s child hood, some troubling experience, so some of these fears need more reading into, but it is difficult part is why we listen to some over others, like the story with the men of the Essex? I agree with her that it stems from what story is most easily envisioned, which story can create the most vivid imagery, like how easily it is for a child to see something evil in the dark.

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  13. Matt Rapoza


    Karen Thompson Walker speaks of fear as a sort of unconditional instinct that humans are pressured to ignore or even try to suppress. She defends fear as an imaginative story telling and even foresight for individuals, which is a different approach to terror than I have ever heard. The main focus of our fears and instincts is the basic statement, “what will happen next?” Fear is survival, choosing from a plethora of different life threatening choices to determine the safest and most practical route, to subdue fear itself would be equivalent to diminishing your chance to survive in the dangerous world that we inhabit. Karen states that, “we need to think of our fears as stories, and of ourselves as the authors of those stories.” Her comment takes on the form of potential human insight, as we all have different stories and hope to achieve our own “happily ever after’s.” In the dreadful story of the men of the S-6 Wailing ship, the men took the longest route back to land because of their fears of cannibalism. However, as the men run out of food after two months, some of them resort to their own form of cannibalism, becoming the very thing they were most afraid of. This story, as presented by Karen Thompson Walker, teaches us that it is easy to react to our most vivid fears, as they are the most prevalent in our mind, however, we should always read into our fears as logically as possible.

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  14. When I read the title of the speech, I didn't expect any new ideas to come out of it. I've heard people say time and time again fear paralyzes you and holds you back, all we need to fear is fear itself... Walker's view definitely came at me from left field, I never thought about fear that way. After reading it, it all made sense and I understood what she meant. I don't know about the rest of us, but whenever I thought about spiders as a kid, I always thought of them as things able to grow as big as a house, ready to grab you with its web and swallow you whole. When it comes to storytelling, I agree whenever I would tell my thoughts and fears to another person. Imagination, it's down pat as my thoughts exaggerate what it is I fear. While I don't believe that they can also predict the future, as Walker claims, I do believe that some fears are rooted in truth, like plane crashes or a bug getting stuck in your ear. They're both possible and they can happen. When I look at a spider next time, I know that now that my younger self's imagination was running wild as I smack it with a shoe.

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  15. I honestly thought that this video made a very good point early on. She said that we as people should look at fear as having a vivid imagination rather than something to conquer or overcome. I like that train of thought for the simple fact that it was different and it made me think. I always just saw my personal fears as something that brought up the emotion of being scared of something, but while watching the video I began to think about how my imagination would often run wild during times of fear and that touched on what she said about a good imagination. I also like the fact that she brought up the thought of fear being seen as outrageous story telling. We as people would create these wild stories of all the possible things that would happen because something we feared came true. She used her own personal experience about growing up in California and she would become frightened when the chandelier above her dining room table would shake during any form of an earthquake. I also liked the ideas that she used about kids being afraid of the dark or monsters under the bed. She used things that I could relate to because I used to share those same emotions. Overall this video made me view fear in a way that I had never even thought about before.

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    1. "I always just saw my personal fears as something that brought up the emotion of being scared of something, but while watching the video I began to think about how my imagination would often run wild during times of fear and that touched on what she said about a good imagination." I agree. Unfortunatly I feel like this was a weird way of saying we are super paranoid when we are scared because we dont know what will happen next and want to try to prepare ourselves for the worse. This is a blessing within a curse.

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    2. Shaquan leach to Erin cotton

      Yes I totally agree to understand it more I started thinking of a situation that I was really scared in. I went through a couple of these different things that go through my head. I realized that it is just like a story. I liked how you pulled out some questions that we think when we are faced with our fears and how you pointed out that we really don't know the answer to those questions until we experience it.

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  16. Briana Jones
    The title has got my attention at first sight “What fear can teach us,” because it’s powerful and makes me ponder about the circumstances related to it. I’m not sure how I will react in such a situation because it’s so dramatically overwhelming and you have to be there to feel the true feelings. I don’t know if I should panic, remain calm, or give up because I believe you have to be in it to understand the emotions. It is true that we know fear but I think there are different types of fear. I feel it is an important emotion because it makes you learn when you try to conquer and grow up. Having no option makes people worry and begin to panic before thinking to make the best of the situation. Fears go along with story because once you pass that moment you can laugh about it. Also it is easy to image the worst and whatever it is that you want to see. When you encounter fear your mind wonders anything that you may have never thought of. Everyone deciphers his or her fears in their own way, which makes us, react different. I have that artist’s passion that Karen Thompson Walker speaks of in the video of getting caught up in a story. When I get caught up in a story I do have reactions that makes me imagine certain pictures in my head. Fear does stop people from living life and it impacts the future of us all. This story has impacted me by thinking of how my fears interfere or brings the best results in my life. It is very important to not let fear take control and dictate your life because you may regret it.

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    1. "It is very important to not let fear take control and dictate your life because you may regret it" is a good statement. This is what I was thinking while I was listening to the video. If you let fear control your life sometimes you won’t be able to do things in life that have a good outcome instead of death. If you do, you will always have thoughts in the back of your head wondering why you didn’t do this activity or experience something

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  17. As Karen Thompson Walker told the story about the whale ship Essex, I became instantly interested. As she described the men on their ship and the sinking and fears of them, I began to realize everything she is saying is true. Our fears can be a story. We often worry and panic about our fears yet it can be a weakness. Something you overcome and “ discard like baby teeth or roller skates.” “Our fears are just a story in our imagination, just another story just as we are the authors.” Watching this video, I can be inspired by Karen and stop stressing my fears. As humans, we always wonder what will happen next. We try to figure out the best routes to go in our lives however, after we overcome that fear we can always look back and laugh at the situation. As Karen described her childhood and growing up in California, she talked bout the chandelier shaking due to the frequent earthquakes. She often worried what would happen to her home if there were a big earthquake. Now, she can simply tell a story about her fears, becoming an inspiring author of her story.

    ( DeAnne Gainey )

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    1. Yes, DeAnne, yes! I completely agree with you. From the very beginning I was interested in the story that Karen Thompson told. It was truly attention grabbing. "Our fears are just a story in our imagination..." is a very true quote that I strongly agree with. I also felt a sense of inspiration from Karen as she broke down what our fears truly are and much like DeAnne, I felt the need to 'stress less'. As in my response, DeAnne mentioned how Karen used her personal experiences and I found it much easier to connect with Karen as a person rather than a speech giver. Great response D. Keep it up!

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  18. Kaisean Roseboro, here....
    The story about the Essex crew is something that kept me interested in the speech. Karen Thompson gave an excellent speech about the knowledge of fear and what cause it causes us to do, to say, to think. Some fears we have are more of accustomed to our lifestyle. Fears are really the testings of our imagination and awareness. It shows our growth and the reality we see in our own eyes. As Karen said "soon we realize that here are no monsters under our beds or that not every earthquake knocks down buildings". The way she told the story of the Essex Crew was great. She really spread out every part of the story and analyzed every piece of it. From their options to their decisions. Really proved a point that fear is really a mental thing. Sometimes we create a fear; the work of our imagination. And we are able to self-predict our future outcome from our fears, which is why the ending of the story about the Essex was really accurate, they went upon their self-predicted fears. Which makes perfect sense when you think about it. This is probably one of my favorite speeches in this class so far. Great detail and Analysis. Totally worth my time.

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    1. Jonathan to Kaisean
      I really love the way you interpreted this video Kaisean. I agree with you on the point you made that fear really is a mental thing. I think everyone in their lifetime has had to make a decision not because they wanted to but based of their fears. Basing your decision on fear can make for two possible outcomes. Either you run away and avoid that fear or you go head on and face that fear. But it is impossible to know which one is the right decision, until the end of it all. This was probably one of my favorite speeches too because it got me to think much more deeper about what fear really is.

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    2. Zach responding to Kaisean
      I gotta say that I hadn't thought about the essex crew storying being the tie to all of the points in her story, but it's true. Without it I feel her whole topic would have fallen flat, but luckily she kept it in and the story flowed will because of it. Also, I agree with the point you made about fear being mental, and I can safely say that fear has definitely swayed at least one decision in everyones life.

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    3. That's a good point when you say that fears show our growth and test our imaginations. There are some fears that we grow out of and some that we keep with us all the way into our adult lives because we can't seem to let them go. Some fears like the monster under the bed seem so absurd to us now that we're older but there's fears that could happen to any of us, making that story tie in makes so much sense. The quote you put in is true as well, because while some of those things can happen to us, we can't live in fear and we will have to face it somehow.

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    4. Donyel to Kaisean

      I can fully agree with with you said. Fear does show us that some things we shouldn't be afraid of. Especially things that are necessary to everyday life.Depending on our lifestyles we might have different fears because we've all experienced different things but i'm sure we all have a fear in common that we share.It is all a mental thing and as we grow up we learn what fear is through experiences or things that we've heard from others. Fear can either make you or break you in life.

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  19. Jonathan Feliciano


    Fear is something we as humans come across all throughout our lives. What exactly is fear though? One thing that Karen said that really stuck out to me was “We know how fear feels, but I'm not sure we spend enough time thinking about what our fears mean”. She then goes on to compare fear to stories which made a lot of sense but I never thought of it that way. It really made me look at fear in a different way, I always thought that just as she said herself that fear is something we conquer. Fear can also bring out a person’s true colors. Everyone hopes that there fears never come true but when they do what do you do? Panic and run away from fear, or do you stand and fight your fears? There are many questions that can be tied to fear, and many people don’t know the answers until their worst fear comes true. The story about the sailors she talked about shows what fear can do to humans. They were so scared of what they heard about the cannibalistic humans that “awaited” them on the nearest island, that they took the longer route causing more deaths that could’ve been avoided.

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    1. Tara to Jonathan
      Yes! I agree, I never thought of comparing my fears to stories but once she said that and I thought about, it made perfect sense. To understand it more I started thinking of a situation that I was really scared in. I went through a couple of the scenarios that that go through my head and I realized it IS just like a story. I liked how you pulled out some questions that we think when we are faced with our fears and how you pointed out that we really don't know the answer to those questions until we experience it.

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    2. I completely agree with everything Jonathan said. I never thought of comparing my fears to stories either and I have to agree with you and Tara it makes sense. I like how you said fear brings out a persons true colors. I agree with you when you said that there are so many questions that can be tied to fear I know from a personal experience that statement is true. I definitely felt like all my questions where answered after I was forced to face my worst fear.

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    3. Eysa in response to Jonnyboy
      I completely agree with Jonny on his response to Karen Thomson Walker’s TED speech. I also found her comparisons to stories very useful in understanding her point. People view fears completely different and she broke them down very simply; there’s a beginning, middle and end. I personally have always treated my fears like this, I try to foresee the outcome(s) of a choice or a decision I’d make and choose how I want to deal with each consequence. I think Imagination plays the biggest role in fear, mainly because we conjure up different thoughts we might believe are scary but like Karen said “...Not every earthquake brings buildings down.”

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  20. The men of the whaleship Essex story wow; just thinking what would I do being put in that situation. Do you act like a hero or coward and panic? “We know how fear feels, but I'm not sure we spend enough time thinking about what our fears mean.” This quote is so real and vivid for me, I believe we run away from our fears because we are scared and that causes us not to be able to confront what is bothering us. Karen mentioned that “our most creative minds fail to leave these kinds of fears behind as adults.” I agree and believe in that sometimes our minds are our worst enemies. Our MINDS the power source to our bodies makes us who we are, what we think and what we do. What can fear teach us? Fear teaches us to think quickly on our feet; that brings my question, do you act like a hero or a coward and panic when faced by your fears? My answer to that is followed by elements in Karen’s speech, fears are stories are mind makes up and makes us think. It is up to us to write the story (fear) as best as we can with the world and obstacles around us. Given that we choose our decisions and fear is to teach us strength mentally in all imagination.

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    1. I like how you capitalized "MINDS" in your response so readers can understand specifically what you’re talking about. Also you kept asking the question, "Do you act like a hero or coward and panic?" I think that in order to face your fears, even if their just your imagination. You should be a coward and panic. It’s your imagination so you should just face it and get through your fears. That’s a part of life and that’s how people are able to take risks in life and overcome their fears. Because they did the opposite of what you asked. I think your response was well thought out, great job.

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    2. I found Linai’s response to this video very intriguing. ”our minds are our worst enemies.” I found this to be a different response but I understood what you were saying. I agreed that our minds can play tricks on us and that is why people get these very creative stories in your mind. When you say, “Do you act like a hero or a coward and panic when faced by your fears?” I got confused, because I feel as though most of the things that are feared are things that are unknown. Like how the sailor didn’t go to the islands closest to them because of the story they hear about cannibalism. I feel as though they really just feared the unknown. My question to you is how do you face something that is known?

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  21. As I listened and Read the transcript of Karen Thompson Walker’s very interesting speech about what fear can teach us and the story of Whale ship Essex. I came to the realization of my fears and how our fears can cause us to make decisions. One of the major decisions the crew of the Essex made was out of fear the decision to not go to the closest island because they were afraid of the rumors they heard about the islands, and several others nearby, were populated by cannibals. As she talked about fear I could only reflect on my own fears, what I was afraid of when she said “and more time concerned with the subtler and slower disasters we face: the silent buildup of plaque in our arteries, the gradual changes in our climate.” I then considered the things that I don’t consider scary. I did learn something in this video such as what “productive paranoia," meant ,which meant in my own words people who face there fears over come and prepare themselves just in case there fears do come true. I would much be productive paranoia then a person who males decisions because I am afraid of something. Another one of her points that stuck out to me was the fact that some of our fears that we have measure our growth I also enjoyed her point of view on how we should face our fears, that we should face them as a story and we are the writers of it.
    (Ruth Walton)

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    1. I can agree with what Ruth said. This video did allow me to do a lot of thinking. Thinking about my own fears and how they can sometimes heavily effect the decisions that I made in a state of fear. I liked the example that Thompson used of the ship and the sailors making a life or death decision based on fear alone. That speaks about the impact that fear can have. I'm in the same boat with Ruth in terms of personal reflection on my own fears while watching this video. Her point of view on facing our fears was a very valid one. Ruth and I shared a lot of the same opinions about this video.

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  22. This video has truly opened my mind to how drastically fear can over take someone’s mind. How fear can cause us more harm then what we actually fear. Her story about the men on the boat and how what they feared hinder them from pursuing their dream. Their fear is what detoured them from doing what they originally wanted to do which in the end caused them to live out their fear. They were so worried abut a negative outcome they did not stop to think about what could go right. They tried to overcome their fear by avoiding it but in actuality they lived out their fear by becoming cannibals themselves. As seniors I think we all experience this type of fear when applying to college. Some of us would rather go to a cheaper school instead if our dream school in order to save money, but go to the cheap and drop out because the school does not fulfill your exceptions of college. In the end instead of saving money like you intended you end up wasting money.

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    1. I totally agree with Shamira in the idea that ours fears can control our future. If we let our fears guide and control us then we will be held back and struggle to continue striving what we truly want in life. I also found Karen to be all over the place in some of her ideas. The ideas made a lot of senses and I was able to connect with them, but after a certain amount of time I was lost. I found myself not able to listen of focus back into what Karen was addressing. However watching this video definitely makes one think about fear in a whole new aspect. It makes one reflect upon their thoughts, imagination and dreams

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    2. Uh oh Sidnee spelled about wrong! Anyways I liked how you connected senior fears to the video. It was a good connection to the sailor story. As seniors we are experiencing a lot of different things. This then, causes us to be afraid of certain aspects as we begin to prepare for the next chapter in our lives. If we let our fears detour us from doing something, in some cases we wind up doing what we didn’t want to do in the first place. I never thought about fear in that type of way before. Usually if we are afraid of something we do anything we can to make sure that doesnt happen. For instance if we are afraid of driving up hills. We may drive a completely different direction to stay away from that hill. However, as Karen Thompson pointed out, by listening to your fear and staying away from that hill we may wind up having to drive up an even steeper and scarier hill. Both Sidnee and Karen made me see a different effect of fear that I did not see before.

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  23. Out of all of the videos we have watched, the video of What Fear Can Teach Us captured my interest the most. While the previous videos we watched talked about important issues happening around the world and were very informative, this video introduced me to a new way to look at my own fears. This video differed majorly from the others by influencing me to focus on myself and own anxieties, whereas the ones before had me think more about global issues than my own problems. One statement made by Karen Thompson Walker that I was able to form a strong opinion on is “…we’re often encouraged to think of fear as a weakness…” As Walker discusses fear, and how it is related to a story, I realized that our fears should not be considered weaknesses but instead should be used as something to strengthen us as human beings. Although being afraid of something might make an individual feel powerless, this feeling will eventually be replaced with pride as they finally get over their fear at some point in their lifetime. Rather than believing that fear weakens us, people should see their fears as assisting them in gaining strength. The ability of facing something that scares you, rather than walking away from it, takes a great amount of courage and therefore I do not believe fears should be “discarded like baby teeth or roller skates.” Instead, they should be embraced and overcome, helping an individual become a stronger person than they were before.

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    1. Mariah Gonzalez I am in full agreement with you. The video was more of a self-reflection where you can see where you stand mentally. Kind of a self-awareness of how you think and how your thoughts can have such a major impact on your life. There are many things in the world in which I fear but I have never thought about fearing fear itself. The idea that what you fear is not the problem but just having fear is. Fear can overwhelm your mind which intern can dictate your life. Fear can even restrict you from achieving your dreams.

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    2. Watching the video and them reading your comment put it together for me because I saw it as a growing experience but when you quoted her likening it baby teeth and roller skates, that's exactly what it was. Sorry about the run on sentence. Anyways, I agree that being afraid can make us feel powerless, they can in turn become our strength because we looked into the pit of each fear we overcome and step over it. Each step we take over our fears makes us stronger so yes, we should in a way embrace our fears instead of push them away totally.

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  24. I’m sure that as I look through my classmates comments to get an idea of how they felt about Karen Thompson Walker’s speech I’ll read a lot about her nasally deterring voice but maybe even this evasive way of approaching the topic has something to do with the point Walker was trying to get across. Walker in her speech states “It’s[fear’s] a kind of unintentional storytelling that we all are born knowing how to do.” She then goes on to explain that fears, like stories, have characters, plots, and vivid imagery. These stories can effectively be used to predict the future and assist one in making the least destructive decisions. Walker’s point is unarguable. I can’t count the amount of times I have imagined the worst possible outcome and made a decision I’ve regretted based on that fear. If I had a more positive outlook on my fears I would have definitely made some better decisions in my 18 years. I found it very interesting that successful entrepreneurs are mostly people who read their fears properly, a trait that walkers source described as “productive paranoia”. I think that everyone could use a little productive paranoia. Some quality advice from Karen Thompson Walker’s nose.

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    1. Agreed. There is definitely too much emphasis being placed on peoples' personal feelings about this woman. I admit I did get distracted from the subject matter of the first blog post, and I did briefly reference it in my response, but we should be able to get past it by now. The subject matter of this lecture may not be as important as the previous two, but it was definitely more interesting and registered a little closer to home. After all, the majority of us in this journalism class haven't been involved in war or the fight against HIV and AIDS. I would have thought this talk would have been easier to sink into as we have all experienced fear. based on the reactions of other students, I suppose everyone else didn't dig it as much as I did.

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    2. I agree with Ryder's reply. I find the topic of fear very important. Some may not find it important because it's not as specific as the topics of the previous videos. Karen Thompson compared fear to storytelling and I absolutely agree with that. Like Elijah said, we do draw up the worst scenarios in our heads and don't take time to look at our fears logically. If we don't face our fears, we will live with regret and the question of, "what if". Karen Thompson also mentioned that with fear comes truth. So I guess you can say if you face your fears you're facing the truth.

      Jessica Vongxay

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  25. Becky Herring responding to the video

    I found this video to be quite intriguing and it offered a lot of self-reflection. It was interesting the way that Karen Thompson Walker described fear and said that it is so much like storytelling. She said that humans are hard-wired to be optimists and that fear is almost inevitable. I agree; not many people are walking around every day hoping and wishing for terrible things to happen to the world. Most people fear terrible things happening to the world. People waste so much time fearing disasters and tragedies that are so unlikely to happen, like Thompson Walker states, “And maybe if we all tried to read our fears, we too would be less often swayed by the most salacious among them. Maybe then we'd spend less time worrying about serial killers and plane crashes, and more time concerned with the subtler and slower disasters we face: the silent buildup of plaque in our arteries, the gradual changes in our climate.” It took me a while to grasp the idea that Karen Thompson Walker was introducing when she referred to people’s fears as stories. What I eventually took away from it was that when people fear something there is usually more to it than just a simple uneasiness about something. For example, people don’t just fear spiders. They fear spiders crawling into bed with them at night or descending from the ceiling and landing on them. There is always a story behind a fear whether it is knowledge of something that happened to another person or something that one’s imagination thinks up. Fears would have less negative connotation if people thought of them as stories and not as a “weakness.” Overall, I thought this TED talk was the most thought provoking. It was not as black and white as the other two and required deeper thought to produce an effective response.

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    1. I agree with you Becky. I pretty much got the same thing out of this talk that you did. I agree that it "offered a lot of self-reflection". You start thinking about the reality of your fears, and wonder if they're worth it. I also like that you brought up how most people worry about the wrong things, and that this speech was not just "black and white" like the others. I don't think it's as arguable, and yet just as effective.

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  26. Tara's Response
    I enjoyed Karen Thompson Walker's speech. It grabbed my attention more that the other 2 videos we have watched. I liked how she started off with, "One day in 1819, 3,000 miles off the coast of Chile, in one of the most remote regions of the Pacific Ocean, 20 American sailors watched their ship flood with seawater". It was her first sentence and it made me interested and left me wanting to hear more of this story she was getting ready to tell. Then when she transitioned from her story into talking about fear I was surprised because she talked about fear in a different way than I have ever viewed it as. I liked how she compared the fears in our head to stories. I never thought of it like that but I completely agree with it. They are just like stories, and we pay attention to more than others because some are more vivid and easier to picture, just like the men's fears. I often think about why children’s minds are different than adults and how my own imagination has changed so much in my life. So, I was really interested when she was talking about the subject and I liked when she said, “And what we say about kids who have fears like that is that they have a vivid imagination. But at a certain point, most of us learn to leave these kinds of visions behind and grow up.”

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    1. Tara, I like how you brought up her unique view on fear, and how it relates to our imagination. This got me thinking about how my imagine has changed over the years along with my worst fears. I was equally interested in this talk as you, and i agree that the story she told really grabbed the attention of the audience.

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    2. It was very interesting how she started the story, it also got me interested. I didn't know where she was going to take me, So was slightly surprised when she began to talk about fear in the way she did. Like you Tara, I had never viewed fear in this way and it really got me thinking. Fears really are just stories, and that's why kids often have a lot of fears. We have such a large imagination when we're children, we make up stories about bad guys and monsters under our beds, but at some point we do learn to grow out of it.

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    3. I agree with you Tara when you said that Karen Thompson Walker's speech grabbed your attention more than the other two videos. I think it caught your attention more because it was a easier to relate to. I thought her first sentence but it didn't really interest me or make me want to hear more. I also liked how she compared fear to stories. I think its really interesting that you talked about how children's minds are different from adults because I've never thought about that before.

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    4. Yes, I agree! This video was definitely the one I was most interested with out of all three of the videos. I also liked how she started her speech with "One day in 1819, 3,000 miles off the coast of Chile, in one of the most remote regions of the Pacific Ocean, 20 American sailors watched their ship flood with seawater". It was her first sentence and it made me interested and left me wanting to hear more of this story she was getting ready to tell” As I was reading through the other comments I was quite shocked as to how they said some said they didn’t like it. I thought it was a great way to start her speech; she was able to grasp my attention and make me wonder what happened?

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  27. I found her speech very fascinating and interesting. She was definitely well-informed about what she was talking about and she was able to get the message across to the audience. “Fear is … a kind of unintentional storytelling that we are all born knowing how to do.”Honestly, I never thought of fear in that way or any of the ways that she said it was, to me it was just something that I was scared of. Her speech made me ponder about some of my own fears. Why do I fear that the plane will crash every time I’m on board? Why am I scared of going downstairs by myself in the middle of the night? Why do I assume that the worst will happen when it involves one of my fears? Karen’s speech enlighten me, seriously, “And maybe if we all tried to read our fears… Maybe then we'd spend less time worrying about serial killers and plane crashes, and more time concerned with the subtler and slower disasters we face: the silent buildup of plaque in our arteries, the gradual changes in our climate.” I am always worried about the small things that are maybe never bound to happen but I am less worried about the disastrous things that may happen far in the future. Her speech has taught me some new interesting things about fear.

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    1. Cindy I am in total agreement with you. Ms. Walker seemed well aware of the subject matter in which she was speaking on. She clearly did her research. Her reference to Herman Melville novel helped to paint a vivid image of the message she was trying to convey. I also agree with your comment, “I am always worried about the small things that are maybe never bound to happen but I am less worried about the disastrous things that may happen far in the future.” I am less worried about attending college and more worried about what schools I get accepted into. It does not matter to me if I get accepted into a school I do not want to attend all that matters is getting in. I do not like rejection because it makes me question myself.

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  28. Karen Thompson Walker's TED talk was very interesting to me. However it did not grab my attention until “What if we thought of fear as an amazing act of the imagination, something that can be as profound and insightful as storytelling itself?” because having read Moby Dick I hated it and found it to be a really boring book. So I feel as though she could have eliminated the Moby Dick references and people would have still completely understood what she was saying. When she said " We know how fear feels, but I'm not sure we spend enough time thinking about what our fears mean" I was like I get it. I'm that girls that runs through the back warehouse at work because in the movies nothing good ever happens in a warehouse. I realize this is a very irrational fear however my imagination gets the best of me. Then there are the more rational fears that I have "what if i fail my math test" my mind immediately jumps to me failing out of school and never doing anything with my like. When I have a fear I think about the future and everything that is unknown, and how if this were to happen then all of these things would happen in a chain reaction. While I think that the idea that fear is the imagination I find it to be a positive thing in most cases. If I didn't fear failing my math test I may not study for it and fail it and then really end up not doing well in school. In that way I think fear helps me. I also believe fear is sometimes something that needs to be over come. Its like when you are terrified of heights and you ride a roller coaster and when you are done with the ride you feel exhilarated. There might be some point on the ride where you think "why did I ever get on here?" but in the end you feel accomplished. So is over coming all fears a bad thing?

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    1. Becky Herring responding to Samantha Scheib

      I liked how you differentiated your irrational from rational fears and how you described what fear is to you. I agree that fears can be good. Fears sometimes have the power to get you to step out of your comfort zone and there comes a time when you have to overcome your fears. I also agree that fears make you think up a story, like running through a warehouse because of the possible things that could happen. Many things can happen in a warehouse. Your imagination comes up with those things. That is what one fears when they run through a warehouse. I thought the Moby Dick story was effective, however, maybe if Karen Thompson Walker had used a different story it may be more clear how it connects to the topic because people wouldn’t be put off by it.

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  29. I enjoyed Karen Thomson Walker's speech Her speech was very interesting and it made me think about the things in my life that I fear. Although I thought her references to Moby Dick were unnecessary she got her point across really well and I was actually able to make a make a connection between my life and her speech.When Katie Thomson Walker said "We know how fear feels, but I'm not sure we spend enough time thinking about what our fears mean" is really made me think about the things I'm afraid of and the reasons behind it. Recently I had to face one of my fears which was losing someone close to me. After listening to this speech I was finally able to realize why that was one of my biggest fears. I love how she compared fears to stories and when she said " In other words, our fears make us think about the future". I feel like that statement tied everything together and helped me understand the point she was trying to get across

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    1. I also enjoyed Karen Thompson’s speech. I found it very interesting and definitely made me think of my own fears. “I love how she compared fears to stories and when she said "In other words, our fears make us think about the future". I was also struck by this line, I never thought of fear in that way to me it was just a thing I was scared of. That line was also a very good line to wrap up, end her speech and made the audience understand the point that she was telling during her entire speech. The only thing I disagreed with you is, “Although I thought her references to Moby Dick were unnecessary “I felt that it was a strong way to start her speech and was able to grab my attention.

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  30. I recently watched Karen Thompson Walker's TED. The video was supposed to regard fear and how fear affect people. I totally did not like this video. This is mainly because I didn’t agree with anything she was saying. She also was all over the place. She jumped from sailors in the sea, to storybooks, and then to her experiences when she lived in California. She talked about the sailors, and their decision making. However this did not connect to fear at all. It kind of made me laugh a little because to me the sailors were dumb and didn’t make wise decisions at all. In my opinion, fear to me is the thought of losing someone you love or something you care very deep about. Therefore everything she said didn’t really connect to me. Karen Thompson did give a few valid points and ideas however; her overall presentation wasn’t something that was 100% agreeable. I felt that I wasn’t able to connect to it much and that I didn’t really learn anything. In my opinion there are other things to worry about. Everyone will have their own definition of fear. This is mainly because of the different things we experience in life.

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  31. The subject that was discussed in this TED video was fear. Karen Thompson Walker's gives a speech discussing the whole entire concept of fear. However in my opinion fear is interpreted differently from person to person. Karen Thompson describes fear as a story. However she then begins to compare fear to numerous other things such as artists, sailors, the future and so much more. I believe her speech was all over the place and that it could have been much better if she would have focused in on one thing. However, I was able to connect to some of her concepts. One thing that she said that stood out to me was, that fears connect to our future. For if we let fears take over they can control our lives and then in turn take over our future. This is something that I strongly support because fears can hold us back from doing a lot. Overall I believe there were a lot of good ideas presented in this video and it really causes you to think. However, they were all her own opinions. Each person will have their own thoughts about fear. However after watching this video it makes you look at fear slightly differently.

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    1. I disagree in that I feel her speech covered numerous subjects because all of those things are what MAKE fear a good thing to draw from for stories. That is to say, more stories don't have a single motivation or inspiration, its a combination of factors that create a vivid imagery. Likewise, fear doesn't just come from any one thing, its the combination of senses and previous thoughts and things related to that which we are fearing that make said fear so potent and usable. I do agree though, that she spoke too generally about fear in regards to how it impacts everyone. Seeing as how fear comes from imagination, and no two imaginations can be identical, it is thus contradictory to say that people all experience fear a certain way.

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    2. I personally did not like the story about the men on the boat. It took Karen too long to make her point about the story. But I do agree with Sidnee about the men’s fear detoured them from actually getting where they need to go. In Sidnee’s response she stated that “fear can cause us more harm then what we actually fear” I felt like this sentence was touché and improper grammar… SHE USED FEAR TWICE IN ONE SENTENCE!!!! But I completely understand the point that Sidnee is trying to express. Many times we get so caught up in our fears and what we are afraid of what’s going to happen that we often forget our path.

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  32. Ashley Lawson

    Wow. I have never imagined fears being my imagination. However, I can’t help but agree with what she says. My worst fear as a child was spiders. I would examine my room every night before going to bed because I was reminded of these spiders turning into these huge “eight-legged freaks.” Karen Thompson Walker is absolutely correct, “What if we thought of fear as an amazing act of the imagination, something that can be as profound and insightful as storytelling itself? It's easiest to see this link between fear and the imagination in young children, whose fears are often extraordinarily vivid.”
    Being a creative writing major, this is inspiring. I have never thought of using a fear and creating a story from it. Mr. Craddock always told us in every story there is a beginning, middle, and an end. Just like our fears according to Walker, “Fears also have plots. They have beginnings and middles and ends.”
    I have never read Moby Dick, so that “storytelling” she often referred to was quite interesting and a good way to introduce her topic. She did so effectively because she made sure to keep referencing it and tying her main idea into the story of men deciding what decision to make based on their fears. Overall I found this TedTalks very interesting and inspiring.

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    1. I agree with ashley. Spiders have been a huge fear of mine. The horrendous things I could imagine regarding arachnids would shock and disturb even the most solid-stomached individuals. There's something about spiders that lends to fear. Society does a great job of creating monsters; typically things with extra eyes and limbs, and spiders are real and have those qualities, leading us to instinctively fear them. Nevermind their size in contrast to ours or the fact that they are "probably more scared of you than you are of them" we only consider the qualities like cocooning victims and waiting to eat them, a slower than normal killing process. Also fearsome is their numerous presence - they have tons of babies. Spiders are truly scary, and as I mentioned in my post, I can only face them if pretty girls are near.

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    2. Becky Herring responding to Ashley Lawson

      I found myself feeling the same way you did about the speech. I have certainly never thought of my fears as a figment of my imagination! However, I can’t help but agree with Karen Thompson Walker as she so effectively explains her viewpoint and uses Moby Dick to help the listeners understand the message. I’m not a creative writing major, but I know that every story has a beginning, middle and end and I liked how Karen Thompson Walker pointed out the similarities between fears and story telling. I also liked how she kept tying in the story of Moby Dick throughout her entire speech. It was like she would introduce something and give an example using Moby Dick and then go on to a different statement and use an example. It helped me understand the topic better and was very effective. I also found this TED talk very interesting.

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  33. Hannah Z
    Being more of a fact-loving person, this presentation wasn't as interesting to me as the other two were, but it was thought provoking none the less. I've heard about happiness and bravery and other positive feelings analyzed but I've never heard an analysis of fear. I think that Karen Thompson Walker's thoughts on fear were very unique and I found it interesting that she thought of them in such a positive way. The story she used as an example of reacting to our greatest fears, the men of the Essex, was the perfect story for it showed how easy it is to make irrational decisions when consulting only your fears. It was also interesting hearing about the background of an all-time classic novel, Mobey Dick, and its inspiration. The fact that she connected her presentation with literature, her field of study, was an impressive connection. The way she presented all of her material was very well thought out and really made me as a listener look back and think about ways I face (or don't face) my fears which I thought was cool. Overall I think she did a great job in making the listener question the things society has taught them and reevaluate their reactions to fear in the future.

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    1. This a cool contrast and a cool distinguishing factor between the two of us. I would also call myself a fact-lover, but I don't think that I have nearly as much stake in that field as I do in my imagination. I love theoretical stuff. Different perspectives and new ideas are always exciting, especially when they challenge a commonly held belief, or in this case, re-examine something that is rarely considered in too much detail. this was by far the most interesting one that I've watched.

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    2. let's add some more words to bump it over 100. I like the attitude that you have regarding her presentation style. I've heard a lot about her voice, and it's refreshing to read a response that notes her well organized speech. everything she said was necessary and concise.

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  34. Leon Lin

    Karen Thompson did a great job on proposing a new way of viewing fear. In society fear is known as a negative subject and most people tend to ignore the topic. In this speech, Karen implies that fear is an opportunity to be viewed as a story where we are the authors and readers. I strongly agree to this because I see fear as something that we as humans created. We control what we fear and what we shouldn’t fear. When Karen states, “…As we grow up, we're often encouraged to think of fear as a weakness, just another childish thing to discard like baby teeth or roller skates...,” it caught my attention when she said that because people tend to said fears creates a person’s flaw. When I was little I was taught that fears were a positive influence, by knowing what your fears are you can better yourself. At a young age I was afraid of going to the beach because I watch many horror films about the sea monster, I would always cry when near the beach, believing there were sea-monsters near. I eventually grew out this fear because swimming became one of my hobbies. I believe that by accomplishing and conquering these fears one becomes more fearless.

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    1. Briana Jones replies to Leon Lin
      Personally, I felt her job was well done depending on an individual’s mindset. I am open-minded which makes it easy to think outside the box and my knowledge broadens. I do believe it is true that society make fear a negative emotion to express. I do not believe people ignore the topic because everyone has their fears. Even if they want to ignore it, it may be difficult to accomplish because fear cannot be control by us. I believe is a natural emotion that people learn of and use it to full extent when it isn’t necessary that horrible. But the images or other aspects to keep fearing certain things is definitely created by us wanting to see what we want to see. I think we can overcome from being in fear if we practice it but sometimes there’s fear that you just can’t explain why it is there but it is and it must be dealt with. I think we should teach the future to not think of fear as weakness but as strength soon to come because it will be conquered.

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  35. From Junwan Ge.

    What happened to the men, this I wondered as I listened to her speak and just then, my curiosity was uncovered. "If I've done my job as a storyteller today, you should be wondering what happened to the men of the whaleship Essex. Our fears provoke in us a very similar form of suspense." Fear is not the past, it's the future. What will or will not happen. As vivid fears are most tangible to our mind, we linger on to those and become more and more aware of them. They only become more scarier. We need to detach ourselves from those feelings, looking closely at the evidences present, handle the fears by distinguishing them, removing the impurities, leaving the truth out. Those will be the fears that are the most subtler. However I feel like sometimes even if I realize there's a fear that requires more attention, I'll still dismiss it for the time-being and let myself be distracted by something else. To read and deal with fear properly is not something that's done with ease, but if accomplished can be very rewarding.

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    1. Briana Jones to Junwan Ge

      The same thing I wondered was what happens to the men and yes she did tell of what happen to the men. I believe she does her job having us wonder and be very eager to the ending. Definitely fear is the future because the question we all ask, “what happens next?” tells us this. For we do not know the next part but we do know what occurred in the past because we have pass that. Our mind can easily have fear linger because it is easy to vision, understand, and relate to. We play tricks on ourselves when we are in fear of something because we let it get the best of us. When we detach from the feelings we are freed from the dictation of fear.

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  36. Meghan Rebholz

    I found this TED talk video to be the most interesting out of the three videos we have watched. Instead of listening to topics about things happening in our world, it was about human beings and their instincts. Fear controls a lot of what humans decide to do or say. This speech, I feel, tries to explain why fear is able to have this much control. Karen Thompson Walker proposes he question, “So how can we tell the difference between the fears worth listening to and all the others?” When she asked this question I began to think to myself exactly what caused me to listen to certain fears. I agree completely with Walker saying how our imagination is a large part of what causes us to listen to our fears. If we are able to imagine, in much detail, what could happen if this fear came true, we are more likely to listen to that fear. These fears are the most vivid and luring.
    Walker’s points made in her speech made my brain go crazy. I started thinking about things I fear and which ones I should actually fear. Also how our fears can control all of our actions. That amount of power is insane to me. Even though I was in a way freaked out, this speech was very intriguing and had me thinking about my life as a whole.

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    1. I totally agree with you, my brain was also going a little crazy. This was also my favorite speech, the others were interesting but I really felt like I could connect with this one. It made me think about what my fears are and what they mean. It's crazy to think about how much our fears can affect our lives and our future. It had me asking myself if I would let fears of my own affect what happens in my future. But then again how much of our fears are imagination, like you said. How many of my fears could never actually come true and how many could? And how can I control this? All in all I found Karen Thomson Walker's speech very interesting.

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    2. I agree with meghan, the more "vivid" our fears are the more likely we are to believe them. Fears can be a huge deciding factor in our lives and I think if we learn to read our fears the right way, then they will guide us in the right way. We should definitely take into consideration what Karen Thompson has to say. I liked how meghan mentioned this part of the speech because I find it to be intriguing as well. Our fear is created in our imagination and our ability to tell a story. Some people are more "imaginative" than others but I think Karen Thompson's point about reading your fears as an artist and a scientist should be helpful to everyone.


      Jessica vongxay

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    3. I agree with Meghan completely because I as well thought this video was the most intriguing, it instantly grasped my attention instantly with the story of the sailors. I cannot even imagine being trapped in the middle of the ocean, 10,000 miles away from home and having limited food supply. I also believe Meghan was on point when she elaborated on how fear is only relevant when we listen to it. We focus too intensely on our fears rather than trying to get over it and face them. Fear is also based on story-telling and fables. Fear is only as great as we make it.

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  37. Shannon Kalia

    Karen Thompson's video about fear caught my attention right away when she opened with talking about the story of the Essex crew on the ship. At first I wasn't sure why that was relevant, but when she connected it to the concept of fear and how fear can take over someone's mind, I understood what she was trying to convey and it really opened my eyes to how much people in society fear things, and that fear is more of an instinct and everyone gets it. I thought about all the things I fear, and realized how overdramatic and unnecessary some of the things are, like spiders. I think when she related it back to story telling she made a really good point, and I think this video was really insightful and made me think a lot about how when one is faced with fear, it becomes the most prominent thought and worry in their mind and many people act impulsively or try to hastily make the best decision they can to get out if the situation right away, when you should really, like Thompson said, be looking into your fears rationally and objectively and you would probably make a better, more logical decision and realize you shouldn't feel as fearful as you do. Thompson's video was really interesting and insightful, and taught me that if you really focus in on what you're fearing in a logical, reasonable manner, you will most likely handle the situation better and overcome those fears you had.

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    1. Ashley Lawson

      I realized that I too share an idea with Shannon. “I thought about all the things I fear, and realized how overdramatic and unnecessary some of the things are, like spiders.” Any type of bug for that matter, a fly buzzing by my ear, I flip. I start screaming and moving around like I'm crazy. Shannon also mentions, “how when one is faced with fear, it becomes the most prominent thought and worry in their mind and many people act impulsively or try to hastily make the best decision they can to get out if the situation right away…” I find myself doing this often. Not thinking clearly or logically about a situation, but acting on impulse.

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  38. Ty Adams

    I really enjoyed this FEAR video for many reasons. To begin with, I really enjoyed how Thompson took a critical thinking approach to the word “fear” and how it affects us daily. Fear is not something that we can control, as it is a natural instinct to one, and at times can become uncontrollable and unbearable against our own will. Thompson brings up a really good point when she explains how we delve upon the “what-ifs” a lot, and tend to think about possibilities in the future. The thoughts in the future tend to be negative and frightening to say the least. All of these thoughts about the future can make one uneasy, and strike fear among anyone, but it’s very natural to do so. Thompson explains fear in certain types of stories, and how it can create hard decisions for one, to either use fear, or not use fear in a certain situation. I personally think if we face our fears that we can make better decisions, and that if we accept our fears, we can get way farther in life, rather than avoiding them. Fear might be looked at as a curse, but it in a way it can be a blessing in disguise. Fear helps give us the strength to overcome tough situations in life, and sometimes, we need that extra boost.

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    2. Ashley Lawson

      “Fear is not something that we can control, as it is a natural instinct to one, and at times can become uncontrollable and unbearable against our own will.” Wow. I couldn’t agree more. It’s not like we, as human beings, have a switch to when we are afraid of something and when we are not. I like how Ty said it was almost an instinct. That instinct of survival kicks in when we are faced with fear. The decisions that we make can be influenced by what frightens us, like the cannibals and the sailors in Walker’s speech.

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  39. Arieanna Burroughs


    I wasn’t interested in the story about the men whose ship flooded with seawater,” 20 American sailors watched their ship flood with seawater. They'd been struck by a sperm whale, which had ripped a catastrophic hole in the ship's hull. As their ship began to sink beneath the swells, the men huddled together in three small whaleboats.” - Karen Thompson Walker. It was if the story was made up, I think she could have made that story up herself to fit with her concept of fear. But once she started to become more specific about fear then I became interested. Everyone even if they say otherwise, live in fear. But they don’t necessarily know why they fear that specific thing. Like Karen said, “We know how fear feels, but I'm not sure we spend enough time thinking about what our fears mean.” - Karen Thompson Walker. I think that if humans didn’t fear something in life then they would have nothing to overcome or conquer , if humans didn’t have fear then they wouldn’t be so interested in things like rock climbing , and sky diving , taking risks in life. I can agree with Karen when she says that our fears are basically a part of our imagination. We “imagine” that something is dangerous or is going to harm us and that’s what makes us become afraid. “And what we say about kids who have fears like that is that they have a vivid imagination. But at a certain point, most of us learn to leave these kinds of visions behind and grow up. We learn that there are no monsters hiding under the bed.” - Karen Thompson Walker. I think that the whole story about the men whose ship sank was irrelevant to this topic of fear. She could have told a story with something that people fear everyday like health issues, house fires, and murders. Then I would have been more interested in the story, but I don’t think I’ll ever be on a ship in the middle of nowhere and it begins to sink, so I was unable to personally attach to that specific story.

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    1. You have brought a new aspect to my eyes as far aas your perception of the story itself. But i am glad you came to be interested in story, and i agree with everyone lives in fear about something or other. It's very hard to overcome our fears, that's a great quote you used from the speech. We would have nothing to accomplish if we never learned or feared, we would have less self disapline in us. I think the point of the story was the fact of putting yourself in that situation there in your head. what would you do kind of situation.

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    2. I agree. Listening to this TED my first thoughts were Karen Thompson was a little boring. As I continued to listen I to her speech I found it very interesting. To think of fear as story telling is a great way to help conquer your fears along with her statement “We know how fear feels, but I'm not sure we spend enough time thinking about what our fears mean.” The only thing is I feel as if she is making all fears seem insignificant. The story Karen Thompson told of the sailors and there fear of cannibalism in the surrounding islands was a very real fear.

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  40. Aaron

    When the speaker mentioned that “… fears are often extraordinarily vivid [imaginations]….”, it had me thinking in a totally different light. Instead of thinking of fear as a weakness, it should be thought of as an imagination. For example a child’s mind fear of monsters being under the bed is an imagination because they aren’t really there is just in their mind but eventually that vanishes. The speaker states, “…a certain point, most of us learn to leave these kinds of visions behind and grow up. We learn that there are no monsters hiding under the bed…” The only reason why these fears vanishes is because as we mature, we learn more, and as we learn more about something we fear it becomes less frightening. We at a young age imagine things greater than they really are because we lack the knowledge about it. When the speaker related to her childhood stating that “…When I was a child, I remember how frightening it was to see the chandelier that hung above our dining table swing back and forth during every minor earthquake, and I sometimes couldn't sleep at night, terrified that the Big One might strike while we were sleeping. And what we say about kids who have fears like that is that they have a vivid imagination.” That imagination she had vanished because as she’d gotten older, so time down the line she learn about earthquakes and notice that “...not every earthquake brings buildings down.”

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  41. Terrille Howard


    While watching Karen Thompson Walker’s video, for the whole duration I was attentive and was very interested in her topic. I agree with Karen Thompson Walker that fear amplifies your imagination, which can be both a blessing but a hindrance. With too much fear, your body and mind is left in a facade, which can eliminate logical thinking that can isolate you from reality. Unlike, most of the previous videos we were assigned to watch and write a reflection, I felt although her and the other speakers all had a calm voice which bored, however it was really effective with Karen. Karen’s tone was very placid, but it was something refreshing about it. When Karen mentioned when she was younger living in California, she always thought bout earthquakes and what would happened afterwards for her family, I was able to relate. The only difference is I don’t think about earthquakes, I always think about what would happen if someone broke into my house, what I would do and what would happen to my family. Hopefully, that will never happen. Another thing, that stood out for me was when she talked about productive paranoia. I thought was pretty cool.

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    1. I can relate to your response because like you said her voice was very boring but what she was saying is what caught my attention. Everyone lives in some kind of fear every day, some people may say that fear is a part of your imagination taking over your reality. I also agree with you when you said, “I always think about what would happen if someone broke into my house, what I would do and what would happen to my family." I always think about this because it can happen to anyone and crime is everywhere and is has been getting out of control lately. So I fear that something will happen to me or my family. I just try to make sure they are all safe and that i am safe as well. I think that fear is a kind of paranoid, people begin to become paranoid about things and they begin to fear it. The more they fear something the more their imagination takes over and makes the smallest thing big.

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    2. Hannah Z
      I think it's really interesting that you both have similar fears, especially since they sort of revolve around the safety of your family and your home. I think everyone can relate to your fears in some way or another and I think that is a really cool thing people in general share. I will say that I didn’t find Karen Thompson Walker’s voice or her speech in general particularly compelling, I actually preferred the topics and the presentations of the two other speakers. Maybe I was less interested in the subject matter but I had a really hard time focusing on this particular subject. Maybe I’m just weird…

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    3. I also was incredibly interested in the overall topic of this video. For some reason just like you, I was able to focus my attention on what Karen Thompson Walker was discussing for the entire duration of the video; the subject of what she discussed not boring me at all. After reading your response to this video, I completely agree with your statement of “…fear amplifies your imagination, which can be both a blessing but a hindrance. With too much fear, your body and mind is left in a facade, which can eliminate logical thinking that can isolate you from reality.” Although fear can be a great tool for improving an individual’s imagination, I believe that it also can keep people from living their life, which keeps them from reality. If someone becomes too afraid, they will definitely isolate themselves from wherever that fear may be, such as avoiding traveling in a car if they are afraid of dying in a car accident. Someone’s imagination can craft scenarios that involve a certain fear to the point of the fear growing so much that it takes over someone’s mind, and ultimately their life. Due to this, it seems, like most things, that there are many pros and cons to being afraid.

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  42. Ja'Nai Gray


    Fear is something she remembered you conquer and overcome. After listening to the speaker I felt a little sympathetic when she mentioned that she had had a fear of earthquakes. She went on to say that the chandelier use to swing back and forth when a storm approached. After hearing how she had a fear of climate changes it brought me back to my child hood fears that I conquered. As a little five year old girl I feared firemen. I didn't like their uniforms due to the bulkiness and layering. When I reached the age of eleven I became familiar with firemen; learning that their job was to put out fires and be first responders. Fear is a unintellectual story telling with s architect, characters, plot, a beginning ,middle, imagery, and an ending .In this story called fear w are the characters authors and the only way that we will get rid of our fear is if are productive in acting them out. Instead of fearing what other human beings can do to us we should be focusing on silent killers like diseases, climate changes, and health problems. The most important thing that stuck to me in the whole video was when she mentioned that the hardest thing for the two guys was choosing between life and death.

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  43. Cori Cotto
    I agree with what Karen Thompson said about how fear is an “unintentional storytelling that we were all born knowing how to do”, she gave me a new vision on how to look at fear. Usually one would think of fear as something that might happen that their afraid of happening or simply something that they don’t want to happen but no one ever thinks of fear as being a story that we come up with. Another point she brings up is how we’re the authors of our fears, and how we choose to read them can determine how we live our lives. People sometimes live in fear, paying more attention to hiding from what their afraid of rather than how they can overcome those fears and move on. If more individuals saw their fears as stories, and realized that their the authors than, in my opinion, it would be easier to set the fears aside, not forget them, just set them aside long enough to learn how to be cautious of whatever it is that their afraid of but living your life at the same time. We all, at some point in time, fear one thing more than we should the other. For instance, one may fear getting kidnapped more than they fear tar building up in their lungs from smoking. Sure, being kidnapped is frightening, I wouldn’t wish it on anybody, but I would say that dying from lung cancer is more likely to happen than getting kidnapped while walking down the street, in the circumstances of a smoker.

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  44. Right off the back I noticed that the speaker, Karen had a nervus tone in her voice, which immediately distracted me from the purpose of listening to her story, but I was able to grab a few things out. I was able to make the connection with Karen when she brought the idea of young children connecting fear with their "vivid" or wild imaginations. That idea makes sense. When I was younger and im pretty sure that many others had this bad dream or nightmare that someone was always under their bed. Obviously as children we must have picked it up from a movie or a cartoon or some televison show that demonstrated childrens wild and vivd imagination. This was a fear of many but it was and still is an idea of imagination. As Karen stated " We know how fear feels, but I'm not sure we spend time thinking about what our fears mean" I never really took time to understand what that fear of having someone under my bed really meant, but I now know that it was only my imagination and ideas that i picked up from televison or cartoons.

    Kimicah

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    1. I agree that her voice was distracting. When someone gives a speech about such a versatile subject they should attempt to relax, in order to get their message out to the audience better. As both Karen and Kimicah stated children have wild and vivid imaginations. With Kimicah she was afraid of something hiding under her bed. Whereas myself I never was able to be scared of something like that because of cartoons like the Rugrats. In that show they tackled ideas that may be troubling to kids and turn them into something fun and adventurous. As Karen stated children have wild imaginations but it all depends on how that child interprets the information that is presented to them. With Kimicah she could have watched the Rugrats and got scared of the idea that creatures could be hiding under her bed, whereas this intrigued me.

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  45. Christine Perez
    The discussion was about fear. She talks about how we consider fear as a bad thing and how we should see fear in a different point of view. Some fears we can leave be hide even while we become adults. What can we learn about fear? People had fear about islands when they were on the boat the whale ship men. Fear is story telling with begins middles and ends. She explained how we are the authors of our stories and we can decide were our stories will go and how it would end. So that the fear would no longer be a fear but more as if a goal. Sometimes our worst fears can predict the future. Similar to the whale man. You can lesson to the wrong story and if you could analyze it the right way then this tragedy would had never accorded. I liked how she asked questions and really expressed how much fear does play a huge role in our lives, as we are young and while we grow up. This speech makes you think about your dreams and how realistic they are and how your own brain makes up fears.

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  46. Christine Perez

    She was talking about her friends experience with an AIDS treatment trial. She talked about how they targeted Africa because it’s a big population full of people with AIDS and how it was difficult for her friend to get to the clinic. I think things like this are not good for people’s health. It’s like there being used as lab rats, test animals. Also I can feel that there was hatted and remorse. Also I feel that they easily manipulated the girl in to doing this trial. During her speech I found it kind of boring and I wish the topic was similar to yesterdays. It brought a lot of awareness to AIDS and the trials people do to try to find a cure to the disease. When she talked about how her friend had to walk miles to get to the clinic; I think they should pay the people and provide transportation. The woman talked about how she was there for her friend and how she cared about her.

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  47. I absolutely loved this TED talk. The topic was not only accessible, but intriguing. The back story she gave to her speech was very well told. I agree with what she says, although I don't know if I have necessarily been influenced to disdain fear as much as the speaker suggests. Fear is an emotion that is just as important as bravery or compassion. It is healthy to fear things in life just as it is healthy to feel pain when physically hurt. As a teenager, I have often encountered the so-called "Teenage invincibility complex" referred to by many adults. This is a scientific effect of underdevelopment in the lobe of the brain controlling judgement, and understanding of the future. Fear has a completely different quality at different stages in the human life. There is a notable lack of it in adolescent/teen years, which is a heavy contributor to the stigmatism of adolescent recklessness. It is something that has influenced my decisions. When I ski, I throw away fear and race down advanced slopes with a manner of carelessness that would not be found in someone in their thirties. I have yet to experience any serious consequences of this habit, but it gives me an appreciation for this womans proclamation of the importance of fear. Fear and prudence and caution are all synonymous, and are indicative of a person with high integrity.

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    1. I find your allusion to the "teenage invincibility complex" to be extremely interesting. In a relatively sheltered setting at a young and ignorant age, we are taught that fear is a sign of weakness. However, as you pointed out, fear is an emotion, a "gut feeling" that should never be ignored. Although our lobes are not fully mature until about the age of 26, we have the conscious ability to enhance our foresight simply by taking advantage of our instinctive fears, rather than ignoring them. Knowing the way you ski by personal experience, your comparison to your lack of fear while flying down the slopes is perfectly applicable. Great response.

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    2. I agree with Anna completely. The TED speech was very interesting to her audience and I love the way Boghuma told the story. Fear is completely normal, something that we can all overcome. As Anna said, “ it is healthy to fear things in life just as it is healthy to feel pain when physically hurt which is very true. I love how Anna used her personal experience to describe the fears she overcame. In some cases of fear, there are consequences whether you have faced them already or not. This was a very good interpretation of fear, as you used personal examples and opinions.

      ( DeAnne Gainey )

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    3. Hannah Z
      I think it is cool that you pointed out how age really affects different people's feelings of fear. Karen touched on this a little by referring to vivid childhood fears but I really like how you took that the other way describing the way many teens see fear. Personally I hope that fear comes back to you soon because watching you ski makes me fear for my life as well as yours but I'm glad that you are able to enjoy it while it lasts.

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    4. Kendall Dorman
      I absolutely was happy to read your definition of fear. I think that your description of fear and how age comes into play was perfectly worded. When Karen spoke about fear, she spoke about her life and how it played a role in her upbringing of her childhood. My overview of fear is that everyone has them, however it is the way we handle our fears defines us. We shall all conquer fears from our childhood and in our lives still try to overcome these old fears and new fears. Fear plays a big role in developing who we become.

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    5. I agree with Anna on this subject matter. Fear is an important emotion that can give you the strength to deal with situations or shelter you from things that can possibly hurt you.Sometimes fear can be unnecessary especially if you desire to do certain things that my benefit you or be life changing you can choose to get over that fear or let it take over your life. I feel like the "teenage invincibility complex" is something that is true because there are a lot of things now i would want to do or did that might seem insane to me at an old age.

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    6. I truly agree, Anna. Fear is apart of life an emotion we sometimes cannot control. We all have certain levels of fear about things in our lives. The world without fear would also be a world without bravery if you think about it. If everything that's dangerous in life was fully embraced by everyone, it would become more of a common thing. So fear really sets our boundaries and perception of the things we encounter in life. We all have fears, but that just means that we’re human and have feelings. Something that’s common in all of us, really. YMCMB.

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  48. Amanda Saunders

    Responding to Ashley Lawson
    I agree with Ashley, being bewildered by the idea of fear becoming imaginative. Everyone has or has had a fear; Ashley’s was of spider’s or in her terms as “eight legged freaks “ too show her connection to the ideal of fear itself. Fear is defined as; “An emotion induced by a perceived threat. This causes a basic survival mechanism occurring in response to a specific stimulus, such as pain or the threat of danger.” She also connected the story to her major; creative writing. She explains how fear is apparent to writing consisting of a plot. Every story there is a beginning, middle, and an end. Just like our fears according to Walker, “Fears also have plots. They have beginnings and middles and ends.” This appealed to me since I hadn’t made the connection until now. Ironically Visual and creative writing majors both can share the connection, as fear or a childlike imagination can inspire words and figures

    Amanda Saunders

    Responding to Kaisean Roseboro
    I agree with Kaisean how the Essex crew story kept the idea of Karen Thompson’s speech plausible. Having to visualize my own concepts as a visual arts major, fear is one of the most creative things to give life to. Kaisean states “Thompson gave an excellent speech about the knowledge of fear and what cause it causes us to do, to say, to think. Some fears we have are more of accustomed to our lifestyle.” Which I also agree with, different fears are brought from different lifestyles and hardships. One of the things that stuck out to me from Kaiseans response was; “It proved a point that fear is really a mental thing. Sometimes we create a fear; the work of our imagination. And we are able to self-predict our future outcome from our fears, which is why the ending of the story about the Essex was really accurate; they went upon their self-predicted fears.”

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  49. Nah'Tivah Ross
    I absolutely loved this TED talk; I found it very interesting and shockingly true. I feel that this speaker of the three we have watched really knew how to connect with the audience; she put you into the scenario that the sailors were in. She broke down what fear is, which I often wonder about and she analyzed it down very logically. When she stated, “As we grow up, we're often encouraged to think of fear as a weakness, just another childish thing to discard like baby teeth or roller skates.” I believe that we never rid of our fears, as we grow older we gain new ones, that are more realistic in life. For example we learn that there are no monsters under the bed because that is not realistic, but someone may be afraid of being bitten by a dog or attacked. Being attacked by a dog is more realistic than monsters under your bed, that’s why it is more likely to stick with you, as you grow older. Furthermore she really connected with people when she said “It's a kind of unintentional storytelling that we are all born knowing how to do... “In our fears, the characters are us. Fears also have plots. They have beginnings and middles and ends.” If we all think about our worst fear it all has a story, I was absolutely compelled and emotionally struck when she stated this because it is absolutely TRUE. One of my fears is becoming pregnant young, not being able to provide for my children and then a continuing cycle. I wonder if we can conquer all of our fears.

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    1. I agree with Nah Tivah, this was a very interesting speech that I was surprised I actually paid full attention to. The imagery that I received from Karen made me feel as if I was one of the sailors struggling and trying to survive. Karen definitely connected to the audience better than the other TED speech givers. She gave a very clear sense of what fear actually was. I agree with Nah Tivah when she said “We never get rid of our fears, as we grow older we gain new ones.” Compared to being nine as you fear monsters under your bed versus a family member dying at an older age.

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    2. Kendall Dorman
      I agree with both Nah’Tivah and Erin Cotton on how this speech was able to catch the attention of me so fast and was able to keep me interested in hearing what was next. Each picture that I gained listening to Karen’s Speech made feel sorrow for the sailors trying to make it, and survive… I truly felt as if I was one of them. The thing that I enjoyed about Karen’s speech was how I felt connected with her as she spoke… all of her words impacted me and caused me to feel a lot of emotion. I felt fear’s presence and took her knowledge on what “fear” really is.

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  51. When I first plugged my headphones in the computer to begin to listen to Walker’s speech, I was instantly interested with the story of the Essex. I don’t exactly know why this fascinated me so quickly but it had such wording that it grasped me in quick. To be stuck on a rescue raft for months with limited food and an unknown destination scares me more than anything I’ve ever experienced in my life. When Walker went on to talk about how fear was just story based I couldn’t agree more. Imagine all the times in your life when you’ve been too scared to try something new because of a bad experience someone had once! But I myself am a huge contender of fear, I’m always afraid to try new foods or things because I’m mainly scared of having something I don’t like or failing. Failure is a main reason many people hold fears. I fear I will fail at school or fail at pursuing my career in life. The option of not succeeding is huge in our minds and I think it scares us more sometimes than the actual activity itself.

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    1. I also find the thought of having to endure what the individuals involved in the story of the Essex went through to be truly terrifying. Although being stranded on small rescue rafts for months at a time with only a limited amount of food is not the first event to pop into my mind when I think of what I am fearful of, it is definitely a situation that I am incredibly frightened by. As this story was told, I realized that different factors played into the mens fear of being stranded. It wasn’t only the fact that they were in rescue rafts in the middle of open water, but also that they had no destination, not enough food, not enough time, and a fear of dying by cannibalism. These factors built up the men’s fear of being stranded the same way different literary items build up a story. Already afraid, these men imagined the terrible death they would encounter if they were to come across cannibals, which increased their fear level. Like you mentioned in your statement of “Imagine all the times in your life when you’ve been too scared to try something new because of a bad experience someone had once…,” these men did not go for this route of safety due to creating scenarios of what might happen to them if they went for it and because they heard of what gruesome things cannibals could do from others. Making up situations that scared them much more than being stuck in the ocean, the men passed an opportunity at staying alive and from this, I have come to the conclusion that the thoughts we make up in our own minds scare us more than the actual fear we have. (Just like how a story scares children into creating a monster that is hiding under their bed.)

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    2. I agree that the story of The Essex was a good comparison to the point she was trying to make. However, I think that her message may have been different than what you interpreted. She was arguing the point that fears should be listened to, that they should be thoughtfully considered in each decision we make. We should never let them hold us back, but merely guide us in the right direction. Being able to tell the difference between legitimate fears and illegitimate fears is a skill that can acquired only with time. As young adults, we should think through every decision, taking into account all the fears that we present to themselves, and discovering exactly why is is that we are scared.

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  52. Ms. Karen Thompson Walker talks about fear, how it’s a weakness like how “there’s nothing to fear but fear its self” and that we can conquer it. Ms. Walker says fear is an amazing act of the imagination and I agree children get afraid when they hear of stories like the boogeyman, ghosts or thing they see or hear about on television they also can be scared just by hearing something that’s unfamiliar, I feel it truly is great that children can open their minds and create thing far beyond reality I wish more people still had that ability.

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  53. There are many points that Karen Thompson Walker made that made me rethink so many aspects of life. We are paranoid human beings, and it seems as if we can't help but think of the worst case scenario. I have a habit of always asking myself "what if?" The first time I had ever been on airplane, I thought about what would happen if we crashed. What if I lived and my parents didn't? Who would take care of me? Then I'd think about what if I died and they lived. How would they feel if they lost a child? These thoughts would go on and on and I'd eventually come up with an entire story, just as Walker said. It would take some time for me to get myself together and stop spending so much time focusing on the awful "what ifs." The brain is so confusing, yet so amazing. Humans are special since we have the ability to think about the future. Is this a good or bad thing? The men of the Essex serve as a perfect example of how we overthink and how it sometimes gets the best of us. We're scared of the more vivid outcomes. They knew that they'd eventually starve, but to them, it wasn't worse than being eaten alive by cannibals. Some people overlook fear, and then there are always the ignorant ones who say "I'm not scared of anything." We're ALL scared of something, but some of us are just more paranoid than others. I know I'm one of them.

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  55. Response to Jordan

    I liked the example of fears you brought up; American people's highly-concerned fear of terrorism instead of economic disasters definitely supports Karen Thompson Walker's explanation of fear. "we can vividly imagine terrorist attack a lot easier than imagining a recession", everyone can think of bombs easily and it's destruction. However, it's hard to relate images to recession, even though it possess a devastating effect. Terrorism may be a great danger, but chances are, it's way unlikely to happen compared to something like a recession. Even if it occurs, it'll still be short-termed, but a financial crisis's effect will last over a long period of time.

    Response to Shantel Forrest

    I've never thought about fear as a story before either, but what she described made sense. Fear isn't just a feeling, but the curiosity of what will happen, in the worst scenarios. It's a fresh concept to think that the character is you, and there is a plot in fear. A scenario she described made what she meant clear. "You board the plane. The plane takes off. The engine fails." Fear doesn't exactly predict future, but it can guide you if you read each possible outcome correctly with caution.

    - Junwan Ge

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  56. Taquan Hardaway to Kimicah


    I must say I agreed with what Kimicah said about the speech on fear speech and Karen’s comments. The speaker did appear to be nervous and didn’t really say anything that was really valid. When Karen mentioned that children had vivid imaginations it made me think of my fears as a child and how real my fears was and how in reality my fears was just an over exaggeration of thought. Karen’s speech wasn’t really a good one but the topic is a a great topic and honestly gets you thinking.


    From Taquaan to Arieanna Burroughs made many great points in her response to Karen’s speech, The beginning of the speech wasn’t really interesting and didn’t do a good job of relating to her topic of fear. Once Karen continued with her speech it was easier to listen to because she brought up a great topic which inspired a lot of deep though. I must say that I disagree with Arieanna when she commented “I think that if humans didn’t fear something in life then they would have nothing to overcome or conquer.” My reasons for disagreeing is because in life there is always an aspect of life you have to conquer whether it be school, a job, family, or bills life isn’t without its challenges they don’t just a rise because we have fear in our lives. If humans weren’t to have fear we would be more creative less cautious and ultimately live life more, we wouldn’t worry what people thought we wouldn’t care I believe that fear constricts us in life and doesn’t allow us to live life to our fullest potential.

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  57. Amanda Saunders

    Responding to Ashley Lawson
    I agree with Ashley, being bewildered by the idea of fear becoming imaginative. Everyone has or has had a fear; Ashley’s was of spider’s or in her terms as “eight legged freaks “ too show her connection to the ideal of fear itself. Fear is defined as; “An emotion induced by a perceived threat. This causes a basic survival mechanism occurring in response to a specific stimulus, such as pain or the threat of danger.” She also connected the story to her major; creative writing. She explains how fear is apparent to writing consisting of a plot. Every story there is a beginning, middle, and an end. Just like our fears according to Walker, “Fears also have plots. They have beginnings and middles and ends.” This appealed to me since I hadn’t made the connection until now. Ironically Visual and creative writing majors both can share the connection, as fear or a childlike imagination can inspire words and figures

    Amanda Saunders

    Responding to Kaisean Roseboro
    I agree with Kaisean how the Essex crew story kept the idea of Karen Thompson’s speech plausible. Having to visualize my own concepts as a visual arts major, fear is one of the most creative things to give life to. Kaisean states “Thompson gave an excellent speech about the knowledge of fear and what cause it causes us to do, to say, to think. Some fears we have are more of accustomed to our lifestyle.” Which I also agree with, different fears are brought from different lifestyles and hardships. One of the things that stuck out to me from Kaiseans response was; “It proved a point that fear is really a mental thing. Sometimes we create a fear; the work of our imagination. And we are able to self-predict our future outcome from our fears, which is why the ending of the story about the Essex was really accurate; they went upon their self-predicted fears.”

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  58. I don't particularly agree with some of the speakers ideas, particularly that i have grown to shed and adapt to my fears. I think that most fears just evolve and change into new challenges in life. However, when she spoke of how fears can tell a story I immediately began to picture the death of loved ones or a blood-eyed villain creeping behind someone in the darkness. However, my largest and most glaring problem with this particular piece was that it didn't seem to serve much of a purpose. While it was interesting and insightful it had no meaningful message like ending war or global warming. But i enjoyed the piece in any event.

    -Joe Scardino

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