In this episode of Let's Get Emotional, hosts Tatiana Rojas and Dr. Jennifer Martin Schantz explore one of the most fundamental human emotions: fear. While fear is often uncomfortable, it serves an important biological purpose—helping us recognize danger, protect ourselves, and survive threatening situations. Fear is more than simply feeling scared. It affects the brain, nervous system, thoughts, behaviors, and physical body in powerful ways. Whether you're experiencing fear related to trauma, anxiety, uncertainty, relationships, health concerns, parenting, or major life changes, understanding how fear works can help you respond with greater awareness and self-compassion. Tatiana and Jennifer break down the psychology, neuroscience, and evolutionary function of fear, explaining why fear is a normal emotional response and how it differs from anxiety. They discuss how fear presents across the lifespan—from young children to teens to adults—and explore the physical signs that fear is showing up in the body, including racing heart, tight chest, nausea, hypervigilance, sleep disruption, and nervous system activation. The conversation also dives into the connection between fear, stress, trauma, and survival responses. You'll learn how the brain processes threats, why fear can become chronic after traumatic experiences, and how patterns such as fight, flight, freeze, and fawn develop as protective responses. Drawing from clinical experience and evidence-based research, the hosts discuss when fear becomes problematic, how it can interfere with daily functioning, and when seeking professional support may be helpful. They also introduce practical emotional regulation tools rooted in self-compassion to help you work with fear instead of against it. Whether you're struggling with anxiety, panic, trauma recovery, chronic stress, hypervigilance, people-pleasing, emotional overwhelm, or persistent worry, this episode offers valuable insights and actionable strategies to help you understand fear, regulate your nervous system, and build emotional resilience. In This Episode: What fear is and why it is essential for survivalThe difference between fear and anxietyHow fear affects the brain and nervous systemThe evolutionary purpose of fearUnderstanding acute fear, chronic fear, and existential fearCommon physical symptoms of fear in the bodyHow fear shows up differently in children, teens, and adultsThe connection between fear, stress, and traumaHow the amygdala and nervous system respond to perceived threatsUnderstanding fight, flight, freeze, and fawn responsesThe difference between stress responses and trauma responsesWhy fear can become stored in the body after traumaHypervigilance, panic, dissociation, and survival mode patternsWhen fear becomes unhealthy or interferes with daily lifeMental health conditions commonly associated with fearHow EMDR therapy can help process trauma and fear responsesSelf-compassion practices for emotional regulationPractical tools for calming fear and identifying unmet needsHow to work with fear rather than avoid itBuilding resilience, safety, and emotional awarenessKey Takeaways: Fear is not weakness. It is information. Fear serves as the brain and body's built-in alarm system, alerting us to potential threats and helping us stay safe. However, when fear becomes chronic, overwhelming, or connected to unresolved trauma, it can significantly impact emotional wellbeing, relationships, physical health, and daily functioning. By understanding how fear operates in the mind and body, developing self-compassion, and learning effective regulation strategies, it becomes possible to respond to fear with greater confidence, flexibility, and resilience. Links & Resources: Tatiana Rojas: https://getherapyservices.com/ Disclaimer: Let's Get Emotional is for educational and informational purposes only. This podcast is not therapy and does not replace professional mental health care. If you are experiencing a mental health crisis or need immediate support, contact your local emergency services or crisis hotline. In the United States, call or text 988 for immediate assistance.