Angrophobia
Name a fear, and there’s probably a word for it.
Fears have names. And sometimes the names are more frightening than the fear itself.
Consider these (just for fun?):
Nomophobia is the irrational fear of being without a mobile phone or internet access.
Athazagoraphobia is an intense fear of being forgotten or forgetting someone or something.
And how about this:
Hippopotomonstrosesquippedaliophobia is the fear of long words!
With addiction comes many fears.
These are phobias that anyone who loves someone with addiction will understand:
Phobophobia – the fear of fears.
Agoraphobia – the fear of being angry.
But there doesn’t seem to be a name for the fear a mother or father feels when their child shows signs of addiction, falls prey – and even worse – once recovery begins, fear of relapse.
Relapseaphobia?
Pharmacophobia comes close – the persistent fear of developing an addiction. But that’s not quite it.
In high school, when Jacob smashed his fist into his bedroom wall, I understood agoraphobia. I didn’t want to be afraid. I was afraid to be afraid, afraid what an outburst might mean – his or mine – and afraid where it might lead.
Midway through Jacob’s senior year, the counselor asked me “Don’t you ever get angry?”
I hated the feeling of being angry and avoided it as much as possible.
But like addiction itself, I had to face my fear of feeling angry and everything that came with it – all the heart-pounding, head roiling, mind-numbing madness – and turn it into something else.
Trust in my son that he would fight his own fears – without me.
Trust in myself, that I would, too – without him.
And trust in something greater than ourselves to banish all phobias, named or not.
One Reply to “Angrophobia”
Oh so true,