Fear of starting isn’t evidence you’re unprepared. It’s evidence you’re imagining a complete future before action.
Many believe confidence precedes the first step. The opposite is true: confidence is built through progress. Whoever waits to stop fearing before starting waits for an unnamed end.
Who fear of starting actually affects
We overestimate the risk
The mind hoards failure stories and belittles the value of attempt. But most first steps are recoverable, and what’s often considered irreversible isn’t.
We imagine a step larger than necessary
Starting feels frightening when we imagine the complete way as one giant leap. Fear grows the bigger the step. Shrinking the first step shrinks fear with it.
The connection between intention and action
In my framework, intention is the first pillar, and contains this exact precise moment: the gap between knowing what you want and the courage to begin. Many have a clear intention and remain spectators at this threshold.
Crossing this threshold doesn’t require removing the fear, but shrinking the first step until movement becomes possible despite it.
How experience taught me
Every transition in my path, from engineering to IBM to social initiatives to Impactedia, was bigger in waiting than once I started. I didn’t wait for fear to disappear. I started with a step I could take now, and observed what happened.
The confidence I carry today isn’t a natural trait. It’s a result of accumulated steps taken despite fear, not before it.
How to overcome the fear of starting
1. Shrink the step until it becomes clear
Not “start my project.” Rather: what’s the single thing I can accomplish today in two minutes in this direction? This is the right question.
2. Separate real risk from imaginary risk
Ask yourself: is this step actually risky, or merely uncomfortable? Real risk is rare. Lack of comfort isn’t evidence of mistake.
3. Move, then assess
Don’t expect to feel ready before action. Move first, and observe what you feel after the step, not before it. Clarity comes from movement.
What’s next?
Overcoming the fear of starting is the moment where intention transforms into action. And from there continuity, mastery, and impact begin.
Next step: Read the Method
Frequently Asked Questions
Does fear go away with time?
It changes. It becomes less controlling over you. But it doesn’t disappear entirely. Whoever learns to move despite fear acquires a skill far more valuable than those who wait for its disappearance.
What if fear was evidence the direction was wrong?
Fear alone isn’t evidence. Ask: does the direction align with my goal and values? If that’s the case, fear is an obstacle, not a warning sign.
How do I start when I don’t know how to start?
Start with the smallest question: what’s the one thing I know today? Start from it. The next step appears after this, not before it.



