Fear does not announce itself in professional life. It arrives wearing better clothes, such as prudence, strategy, timing, and the responsible thing. It narrows the field of what feels possible before the thinking has properly begun, and it does most of this work without being named.FEAR is an unflinching examination of the internal mechanism that quietly shapes careers, leadership outcomes, and the decisions that matter most. Drawing on the real stories of founders, executives, judges, artists, and institutional leaders across Africa's senior professional ecosystem, Bruce Prins names eleven fears that most leadership literature politely avoids, from the comfort trap to the impostor at the top, the weight of being wrong, the cost of integrity, the silence that damages organisations from within, and the fear that waits at the end of every successful career.Each chapter examines a different fear with precision and honesty, from what it costs to what it masquerades as, and what becomes available when it is finally named.This is not a book of frameworks or five-step protocols. It is the company of people who have stood in the rooms where everything was at stake, felt the full weight of what they were carrying, and kept thinking clearly anyway.Their stories do not resolve the fears they describe. They make them legible, which is the beginning of the only relationship with fear that actually changes anything.Name it. Confront it. Carry it. Build anyway.