A Mommy Supermodel Reflection on Facing What Hunts You
A man who kills what would kill him never dies. This is not merely a statement of survival — it is one of the oldest and most unforgiving laws of life. The obstacle you sidestep today does not dissolve into the air behind you. It waits. It feeds on your avoidance, grows patient and powerful in the dark, and returns — not as the manageable challenge it once was, but as a far more formidable adversary, hardened by the time you gave it and emboldened by the retreat you already showed it once.
Every fear faced is a future crisis prevented. Every difficult conversation not had today becomes the relationship that ruptures tomorrow. Every hard decision deferred becomes the emergency that arrives uninvited, on the worst possible day, wearing armor you were never given the chance to study. Life is not cruel in this — it is insistent. It will keep sending the same lesson in increasingly impossible packaging, until you finally turn around, plant your feet, and face it. So face it now, while it is still manageable. While you still hold the advantage of choosing the moment, the ground, and the terms of engagement.
Because here is what the world does not tell you about the things that hunt you:
They can be killed. They must be confronted. Flight hardly brings true freedom, only a false sense of security.
In 1997, there was a film called The Edge — a survival story set in the unforgiving Alaskan wilderness, starring Anthony Hopkins and Alec Baldwin. Two men, stranded after a plane crash, find themselves being stalked through the forest by a massive Kodiak bear — a cannibal that had already claimed the life of their companion Stephen, and was now tracking them with relentless, patient hunger. It had already tasted the blood of their friend, and now it wanted theirs, too. It gave them no rest. This man eater was eager to dine on its next human feast.
Most men, in that situation, would run.
Hopkins’ character, Charles — cerebral, composed, and made of something sturdier than fear — said something that stopped the film cold and has echoed in every mind that truly heard it:
“I’m going to kill the bear.”
Not outrun it. Not hide from it. Not negotiate with it or hope it loses interest or pray it finds something else to eat. Kill it. Decisively. Completely. While they still had the will and the means to do so, because every hour they spent running was another hour the bear spent hunting, and bears do not tire the way men do.
But here is where the story becomes something more than survival.
To kill the bear, they could not simply stand and fight it head-on — it was too large, too powerful, too primal for a direct confrontation with the crude weapons available to them. They had to be smarter. They had to think. They fashioned makeshift spears from the branches of the wilderness itself — using the very environment that had been trying to kill them as the instrument of their deliverance.
And then they did something that requires a very particular kind of courage.
They turned around.
They stopped running. They set their trap. And they lured the bear — that massive, terrifying, death-dealing force that had been stalking them — directly to themselves. They made themselves the bait. They let the bear believe it had them cornered, that the hunt was over, that the meal was finally at hand.
The bear charged. Certain of its victory.
And it ran straight into the spears they were holding.
This is one of the most powerful metaphors for human courage and I want you to sit with it, because it contains a truth that most of us spend our entire lives running from.
Sometimes the obstacle in your life cannot simply be faced. It must be hunted. Studied. Understood with the cold precision of someone who intends not merely to survive it, but to end it. Sometimes you must be strategic enough to let it think it has the upper hand — to let it charge toward you with all its terrible confidence — and then stand firm, weapons ready, and let it destroy itself against the very preparation it never saw coming.
Think about the bear in your own life.
The conversation you have been avoiding for months, years, maybe decades. The relationship pattern that keeps repeating itself in different faces. The financial situation you turn away from rather than confront. The version of yourself — small, afraid, convinced of your own unworthiness — that has been stalking your dreams through the wilderness of your days, eating every opportunity that got too close.
You have been running.
And the bear has been fed by every step of your retreat.
But here is what Charles knew, standing in that frozen wilderness with a sharpened stick and an unbroken mind:
The bear is most dangerous when it is chasing you.
It is most vulnerable when it is charging.
Stop running. Build your spear. Set your trap. Turn around, look your bear in the eye, and let it come — because the moment you stop being its prey and become its predator, everything shifts. The power that was always yours to claim comes rushing back into your hands. The fear that was eating you alive becomes the very force that drives the weapon home.
You are no longer the hunted.
You are the one who kills the bear. 👑🔥
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