BBC Home

Explore the BBC

Front Page

Life | The Universe | Everything | Advanced Search
 
Front PageReadTalkContributeHelp!FeedbackWho is Online
New visitors: Create your membership
Returning members: Sign in
 
This is the Conversation Forum for Fears and Phobias and How to Deal with Them
<< Phobias from Previous Lives
Agoraphobia? >>

Subject: Clowns
Posted Feb 14, 2004 by
stockis
This is a reply to this Posting  
Posting 21

Previous PostingNext Posting
Don´t forget the teletubbies.
They´re small, they´re evil, they go for the throat and they try to hypnotize your children.

Reply
Read the First Reply to this Posting

Click here to register a complaint about this Posting
Subject: Clowns
Posted Feb 14, 2004 by
azahar
This is a reply to this Posting  
Posting 22

Previous PostingNext Posting
The Cirque du Soleil is in town this month and there are posters up all around with clown faces on them - and they are really scary!!! biggrin

az



Reply
Read the First Reply to this Posting

Click here to register a complaint about this Posting
Subject: Clowns
Posted Feb 14, 2004 by
Mike D'Anna
This is a reply to this Posting  
Posting 23

Previous PostingNext Posting
When I was a kid, Gene Simmons from KISS scared the piss out of me. I'm a lifelong fan now, so I won't call him a clown, but he does fall into a narrow category of face-painted entertainers, so I'm including it on this thread.

Reply
Read the First Reply to this Posting

Click here to register a complaint about this Posting
Subject: Clowns
Posted Feb 15, 2004 by
psycho42
This is a reply to this Posting  
Posting 24

Previous PostingNext Posting
I am 18 and scared to death of clowns. I went to Key West with some friends in high school about a year ago and we saw some clowns and I had to go to the other side of the rode we were walking on. And I refuse to watch It and will listen to Insane Clown Posse but will not watch them. Kiss I can tolerate; I guess I like the music so much I can live with the faces.
Now dolls. . .they're just creepy the way they look at you!!!
~Psycho

Reply
Read the First Reply to this Posting

Click here to register a complaint about this Posting
Subject: Clowns
Posted Feb 15, 2004 by
Mike D'Anna
This is a reply to this Posting  
Posting 25

Previous PostingNext Posting
Ya know, as much as clowns freak me out, I think I'd still rather look at Insane Clown Posse than have to listen to them. Ugh....

ok

Reply
Read the First Reply to this Posting

Click here to register a complaint about this Posting
Subject: Clowns
Posted Feb 15, 2004 by
psycho42
This is a reply to this Posting  
Posting 26

Previous PostingNext Posting
I didn't mean to say that ICP was a good band, if that's what you think I was saying, just that I am so terrified of clowns taht I would rather listen to them than see them.
~Psycho

Reply
Click here to register a complaint about this Posting
Subject: Clowns
Posted Feb 26, 2005 by
a_can_of_duh
This is a reply to this Posting  
Posting 27

Previous PostingNext Posting
how can you be afraid of the most hilarious thing to walk the earth
I"m more afraid of zombies,werewolves, telletubies, ghosts,barney, chainsaws, morlocks, and demons than of clowns, the only clowns one realy should be afraid of would be the psycotic axe weilding type(a.k.a. juggalos)

Reply
Click here to register a complaint about this Posting
Subject: Clowns
Posted Dec 14, 2006 by
theyith
This is a reply to this Posting  
Posting 28

Previous PostingNext Posting
Dolls are my biggest fear (possibly related to clowns, but I'm not too scared of them) because I remember someone reading a newspaper article to me about one of them eating a girl's hair. I was about 4 at the time. What made it worse, was the fact that my grandma thought all girls liked dolls and made me comb their hair...I still can't get too near dolls without my hands shaking.

Reply
Read the First Reply to this Posting

Click here to register a complaint about this Posting
Subject: Clowns
Posted Jun 1, 2008 by
jonnyjonny_uk
This is a reply to this Posting  
Posting 29

Previous Posting
Clown phobia also known as Coulrophobia. This affects many children as well as adults.

One theory is that the face paint, big nose and weird colored hair is so far removed from our conception of what a human face should look like that it unnerves some people.

Another is that we can’t “read” the emotions or mood through all the make-up. This scares some because reading facial expressions is one of the ways we relate to people.

Although it appears on the top ten most common phobias on some lists, there is very little information in the medical literature on the subject.

The symptoms of clown phobia are similar to those of other phobias: high anxiety, sweating, rapid breathing and heart beat and intense fear. Clown phobics know that their reactions are irrational but they can’t control it. Don’t worry, it is possible to effect a clown phobia and fear treatment and cure.

Medications are sometimes used but they don’t get rid of the phobia they just mask the symptoms, to get you through an encounter.

Hypnotherapy or hypnosis works for some people but not everyone can be hypnotized and many people don’t want to lose control even in a therapeutic situation.

Therapy to uncover the cause of the phobia can help. Once the cause is know, treatment can begin to desensitize the client. You may be asked to look at pictures of clowns and then maybe look at film clips and eventually come face to face with a real clown.

One therapist broke through her client’s phobia when she asked her to be made up as a clown and look at herself in a mirror.

I know of one adult male, who can’t even enter a McDonald’s because he might see a picture of Ronald McDonald. Clown phobia, unlike other phobias, can be kept at bay by just avoiding places where you might encounter them. Of course it won’t free you from the phobia but you don’t have to hole up in your home to avoid the phobia.

Ignore people who tell you to get a grip on yourself, grow up and get over being afraid of a silly clown. This can do more harm than good.

Adults remember not being able to attend birthday parties where clowns would be part of the entertainment and many of them still have to avoid those parties. They can’t have a clown at their children’s party or go to grandchild’s party if a clown will be present. Imagine someone who works in event planning for a large arena who has to book a circus or even worse, host a clown convention. This phobia like others can have an effect on every area of a person’s life.

People can sympathize with someone who is afraid of heights, snakes or spiders for instance, but kind of pooh-pooh the fear of clowns. This attitude together with the phobia that they know is irrational, can cause a clown phobic to sink into depression.

As mentioned earlier there are a few treatments available that appear to work well for those suffering from clown phobia. A phobic needs to do some digging to find the one that works for them.

If you want to speak with people who know what you are going through then there is a site here with a thread dedicated to clown phobia http://www.ofear.com/viewtopic.php?f=11&t=1562 hopefully it can be of some help.

Reply
Click here to register a complaint about this Posting




Show Start of ConversationShow Postings 1 to 20No Newer Postings to ShowAlready at End of Conversation
Postings 1-20Postings 21-40

Conversation list


Most of the content on h2g2 is created by h2g2's Researchers, who are members of the public. The views expressed are theirs and unless specifically stated are not those of the BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of any external sites referenced. In the event that you consider anything on this page to be in breach of the site's House Rules, please click on the relevant button to alert our Moderation Team.


Show Start of ConversationShow Postings 1 to 20No Newer Postings to ShowAlready at End of Conversation
Postings 1-20Postings 21-40

Conversation list

Front PageReadTalkContributeHelp!FeedbackWho is Online

Most of the content on h2g2 is created by h2g2's Researchers, who are members of the public. The views expressed are theirs and unless specifically stated are not those of the BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of any external sites referenced. In the event that you consider anything on this page to be in breach of the site's House Rules, please click here. For any other comments, please click on the Feedback button above.


About the BBC | Help | Terms of Use | Privacy & Cookies Policy