In those teenage years, you can start to see a glimpse of who your children will be as adults. You can see God preparing them to go out into the world. You can see their hearts broken, and have yours broken along with them. But you can see their hearts alive with grace and wonder too. That means vulnerability. Love always does. But in that vulnerable love are signs of joy.

October was a month of facing the fears of calling myself an artist and what I make art. I battled resistance and put too high demands on myself. Through deciding who I wanted to be as an artist, I broke through and started to plan my art shop.


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April was a month of embracing my patience. I was stressed and wanted everything to happen at once, but working to choose patience helped me eventually win over the fear that my dreams will take a long time to make reality.

January was my beginning. I faced the fear of starting my blog, to start sharing my creativity with the world. It's been a month of searching for my voice, trying to find myself in all of this. Asking what the hell my Fear Year is.

Background:  Fear of cancer recurrence (FCR) or cancer progression is one of the most frequent distressing psychological symptoms in cancer patients. In contrast to anxiety disorders according to the ICD-10 or DSM-IV, FCR describes an emotional response to the real threat of a life-threatening illness. Elevated levels of FCR can become dysfunctional, causing considerable disruption in social functioning, and affect well-being and quality of life (QoL). We examined the prevalence and course of FCR in cancer patients during and after a rehabilitation program, and investigated associations between demographic, medical and psychosocial factors. We further aimed to identify predictors of FCR one year after cancer rehabilitation.

Results:  At t1, 18.1% of our sample was classified as having high levels of FCR and 66.6% showed moderate levels of FCR. Fear of recurrence decreased over time (p < 0.001) ( = .095), however, at follow-up 17.2% of our sample showed high levels of FCR and 67.6% had moderate levels of FCR. Linear regression analysis (stepwise backward) including demographic, medical and psychosocial factors, revealed that lower social class, having skin cancer, colon cancer or hematological cancer, palliative treatment intention, pain and a higher number of physical symptoms, depression, lower social support and adverse social interactions predicted FCR one year after rehabilitation (R adjusted = 0.34) (p < 0.001).

Introduction:  Prior research indicates that female students express higher fear of failure than male students and that fear of failure is associated with lower social and emotional well-being and higher levels of stress, anxiety, burnout and depression. Fear of failure also leads individuals to limit their choices and take fewer risks than would be warranted given their ability and context to minimise the possibility of failing.

Methods:  We examined cross-country differences in gender gaps in fear of failure as well as factors that explain gender gaps and variations of gender gaps across countries using multilevel modelling techniques. Participants were 517,047 15-year-old students from 59 countries who took part in the 2018 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA).

Results:  Within countries, students with higher reading achievement and who lacked a growth mindset reported higher fear of failure. The gender gap in fear of failure was especially high among high-achieving students and students with high-achieving peers. The size of the gender gap in fear of failure differed across countries: it was higher in countries with higher levels of economic prosperity, with lower levels of societal-level gender inequality and countries with comprehensive education systems.

Conclusions:  The greater prevalence of fear of failure among female students among high-achieving students attending high-achieving schools in prosperous and more gender equal societies could help to explain the paradox of the persistent underrepresentation of females in certain occupations in contexts that are most supportive of females.

USDA is posting this summary statistical Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) complaint data under Title III, "Equal Employment Opportunity Complaint Data Disclosure," of the NO FEAR Act. The NO FEAR Act requires Federal Agencies to post cumulative year-to-date summary statistical EEO complaint data on a quarterly basis during each Fiscal Year (FY).

At the end of last year, all I was craving was calm and stability; my mind was hoping for an uneventful year, nicely ticking along, made of moments of rest and reflection. To say that things did not go to plan is an understatement. Calm and stability are definitely not the right keywords to describe the past twelve months.

This year, I got married, made my first hires at Ness Labs, and started a PhD. None of this was planned. For seven months, I did not have a permanent address. I lived out of a tiny suitcase, relying on the generosity of friends letting me crash in their empty flat while they were away, or on their sofa if they were around. It was messy, unpredictable, and sometimes tiring.

I know I said earlier that my mental health has been strong enough, and I really mean it, because I have been dangerously flirting with burnout this year. Between getting married, not having a place to call home, starting a long-distance relationship, and wondering whether I would get accepted for the PhD, I have no mental energy left to promote Ness Labs the way I did last year.

This experience, and this year in general, taught me that fear can be a powerful compass to identify potential areas of personal growth. Fear is a flashlight pointing towards experiences that feel outside of our comfort zone. Instead of frightening us away, it can guide us towards unexplored territories, and help us accomplish things we may not know we are capable of. Fear can be a self-discovery tool. Fear can be a friend.

Older kids may worry about getting hurt, weather, or danger. When kids are 7 or older, they know real from pretend. At this age, they may begin to fear things that could happen in real life. For example, some may fear being harmed by 'bad' people. Some may feel afraid about natural disasters, stormy weather, violence, or things they hear about in the media. Some may worry about family separations or losing a loved one.

Some kids have a harder time and need more help with fears. If fears or worries are extreme or keep a child from doing normal things, it might be a sign of an anxiety disorder. Anxiety disorders are often very treatable with the right help and support.

When complicated computer programs were being written during the 1960s through the 1980s, computer engineers used a two-digit code for the year. The "19" was left out. Instead of a date reading 1970, it read 70. Engineers shortened the date because data storage in computers was costly and took up a lot of space.

As the year 2000 approached, computer programmers realized that computers might not interpret 00 as 2000, but as 1900. Activities that were programmed on a daily or yearly basis would be damaged or flawed. As December 31, 1999, turned into January 1, 2000, computers might interpret December 31, 1999, turning into January 1, 1900.

Banks, which calculate interest rates on a daily basis, faced real problems. Interest rates are the amount of money a lender, such as a bank, charges a customer, such as an individual or business, for a loan. Instead of the rate of interest for one day, the computer would calculate a rate of interest for minus almost 100 years!

Better Safe Than Sorry

Australia invested millions of dollars in preparing for the Y2K bug. Russia invested nearly none. Australia recalled almost its entire embassy staff from Russia prior to January 1, 2000, over fears of what might happen if communications or transportation networks broke down. Nothing happened.

A TRISKAIDEKAPHOBE is one who fears the number 13, and this is not a good year for the triskies, of which I am one. Living through a year with such a reputation as George Orwell has given this one is bad enough, but consider this added fillip - for only the 27th time since the year 1800, we are living in a year with three Friday the 13ths, the maximum possible. One fell in January, one falls in April (note, that&apos;s tomorrow) and the third occurs in July.

As with all superstitions, this irrational fear of 13&apos;s in general and Friday the 13th in particular has roots that can be readily excavated and examined. According to Norse mythology, 12 of the gods were invited to a dinner party in Valhalla. No one wanted Loki, because he was a notorious troublemaker. But Loki, the tale says, discovered what was up and crashed the party. There was a fight, and Baldur, the most popular god in the pantheon, was killed. The Christian antecedent is even more germane: Jesus had 12 disciples; He himself made 13. He was betrayed by one and crucified on a Friday. Was it a Friday the 13th? Sorry, my perpetual calendar doesn&apos;t go back that far.

In 1804, the first triple-whammy year on my perpetual calendar, Aaron Burr plugged Alexander Hamilton in a duel. In 1874, the composer Arnold Schoenberg, a great triskaidekaphobe, was born - on Sept. 13. He died in 1951 - on Friday, July 13 (1874 was a triple whammy; 1951, arguably Schoenberg&apos;s really unlucky date, was not). In 1888 Jack the Ripper claimed his last victim and disappeared into the London fog forever; in 1914 Rasputin became Russia&apos;s ruler in fact if not in name; in 1942 Hitler began major attacks on the Soviet Union, Poland, the Netherlands, Austria, Greece and Yugoslavia.

&apos;&apos;Oh, give me a break,&apos;&apos; I hear you saying - every year is a bad news year for someone, some town, some state, some area - &apos;&apos;but, please, don&apos;t load the dice so outrageously.&apos;&apos; O.K., O.K. The Prussian serfs were emancipated in 1807, a triple-whammy year, and our flag (which has 13 stripes) was adopted in 1818, another. Not to mention the Wright Brothers&apos; first powered flight, which took place in the triple-whammy year of 1903. 2351a5e196

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