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You know people have like three...
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well, there are four fundamental fears.
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One is fear of their own
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inadequacy and malevolence. That's a big fear, man.
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That can really do you in if you confront it
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accidentally and fully.
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Happens to soldiers sometimes in battle when they find themselves
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doing things they can't believe they do.
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And then we're afraid of society - that would be the oppressive patriarchy because
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society judges us harshly and
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mercilessly in many ways, and we don't like to
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plummet in the...
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What would you call it?
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We don't like to see our reputation savaged in front of the groups that we identify with.
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It's extraordinarily hard on us emotionally for that to happen.
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Which I wrote about, for example, in Rule 1 which is
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a chapter, at least in part, that details out the fact that the neurochemical systems
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that track your comparative status
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in competence hierarchies - also regulate the balance between your positive and negative
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emotion; such that if you suffer a social defeat, your proclivity to
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experience negative emotion radically increases
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and your proclivity to experience positive emotion radically decreases. And people
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seriously do not like that. And it's no wonder - because who wants to be
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completely overwhelmed with sadness, and bitterness, and anxiety,
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and resentment, and disappointment, and frustration, and grief and then, also,
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devoid of happiness?
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You know, it's the very definition of Hell.
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And if a status defeat will increase that probability
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then we will fight very hard to maintain our status positions,
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which we certainly do - that's another fear.
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And then, of course, we have the fear of nature. And we should
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because, of course, nature,
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despite being "the environment" and this thing that we should be striving to protect and maintain, is
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also trying, with all of its might,
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constantly: to make us ill, and old and
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kill us; and is generally very successful at all three.
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And so, there's every reason to be afraid of nature... and...
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you know, one night alone in the bush will pretty much
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convince you of that.
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And then people are also afraid of the unknown.
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And so those are the big categories of terror that human beings face.
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And to be naked on stage is to face at least two or three of those simultaneously.