Quote from Lohnsklave:
Hi Nihaba,
I think it's a little bit too easy to blame it on the fear of success. In your examples I think it is the preassure of success. In the athlete example the athlete doesn't have pressure to succeed in training. If it goes wrong today there's another chance tomorrow. But in competition there is the pressure to succeed _this_ time - the next competition is a year away and then there is only one chance again. Many people (me too) have problems to deal with this - to get into a mental state of self-confidence and taking things easy without being careless. If you are afraid of losing you lose. If you are too careless you might miss an important thing and lose, too.
In the case of the trader I would say he left his comfort- and confidence-zone when he trades 10 contracts. The money he has won hasn't been booked on his mental account, and with his old mental account value 10 contracts are too much risk. I found out that I treat fast-earned money with much less care than my money thats booked in my mental account. And I get very risk averse if my real account drops below my mental account.
Success means for me to achieve a goal that I set for myself. If I don't achieve one for a longer period of time I really get a thirst for success.
So I don't think that I have a fear of success although I'm reluctant of leaving my comfort zone. In my day job this works together: Success means staying in the comfort zone and failure means trouble.
If someone has fear of success he/she isn't satisfied with the pros and cons of the state he/she wants to achieve. Then the goal hat to be changed.
Self sabotage:
There is this scene in the film "the fabulous destiny of Amelie poulain" where a horse sees a bicycle race, jumps over the fence and joins the race. (It's a scene that actually happened). The horse left its comfort zone of food and shelter. Maybe it just followed an instinct - but do we something else?
What looks like self-destruction might be the wish to join the wild life after being fed up of the life of a domestic animal.
Last year my equity curve went up and down six times - six times success! I had got what I wanted. Was it also six times self-sabotage? Or was I just too elated and too much leveraged and couldn't think clearly any more? Or did I stumble when I tried to jump over the fence? Or am I fed up of being a domestic animal but afraid of the wild life?