Courage isn’t the absence of fear—it’s the decision to move forward while fear is still present.
“You have plenty of courage, I am sure,” answered Oz. “All you need is confidence in yourself. There is no living thing that is not afraid when it faces danger. The true courage is in facing danger when you are afraid, and that kind of courage you have in plenty.” ~ L. Frank Baum
There comes a moment in every life when the noise fades and you realize something unsettling: you are standing alone.
No friends nearby. No instant advice. No one to carry the weight with you. Just you—and the challenge in front of you.
In moments like these, the options feel painfully simple. You can turn away, retreat, and look for safety. Or you can stand your ground, meet the challenge eye to eye, and say, “Give me your best shot. I’m ready.”
Courage is often misunderstood. We imagine it as fearlessness, as bold certainty, as unwavering strength. But courage rarely feels heroic in the moment. More often, it feels shaky. It feels unsure. It feels like acting while afraid.
And that is precisely where confidence is born.
Confidence doesn’t come from guaranteed outcomes. It grows when we face something difficult and refuse to let fear make the decision for us. Even when the result is uncertain—even when things don’t go perfectly—we gain something invaluable: the knowledge that we didn’t back down.
Those moments define us. Not because we always win, but because we show up.
When you face a challenge instead of fleeing from it, you quietly rewrite your story. You become someone who can be trusted—especially by yourself.
That kind of courage? You already have it.
Something to Think About
When was the last time you chose to face fear instead of stepping away—and how did it change how you see yourself today?