Finally, the metaphor implies a hopeful option: channels can be redirected. If anxiety grows by encouragement, it can also shrink when reinforcement is removed and new pathways are practiced. Approaches like cognitive-behavioral therapy explicitly target this, treating catastrophic interpretations and safety behaviors as habits that can be unlearned (Aaron T. Beck’s foundational CBT work in the 1960s emphasizes how thoughts shape emotion and behavior).
Rather than demanding the mind become fearless, Roche’s idea points to a practical aim: notice the first trickle, avoid deepening the groove, and cultivate alternative streams—curiosity, problem-solving, and grounded attention—that keep the whole landscape from draining into fear. [...]