On the dark roads of Gotham City, Bruce Wayne, otherwise called Batman, got hit hard by a betrayal. His love partner, Mio, accomplished something shocking by taking the life of somebody close to Bruce Wayne after his parents passed away.
Robert Pattinson in The BatmanRobert Pattinson as Bruce Wayne/Batman in Matt Reeves’ The Batman
This mess brought back all of the terrible memories from his young life, causing Batman to feel like he was suffocating his feelings. He had to manage a lot of old wounds, resuming them because of this betrayal. It’s kind of captivating to see how this entire situation meddled with Batman’s head and how it affected his emotions. 

A Betrayal Left Bruce Wayne Emotionally Crippled

Bruce Wayne went through a difficult stretch when somebody close to him betrayed him, leaving him feeling all screwed up inside. Back when Bruce was only a youngster, he saw his parents get killed.

That shattered him terribly, and he chose to go through his time on earth battling miscreants as Batman, invoking a bat as his image.
When Bruce was training to be Batman, he was told by his mentor, Shihan Matsuda, to suppress his feelings and be tough. However, his mentor’s wife advised him to embrace his emotions. Bruce began seeing a girl named Mio, sneaking around Matsuda’s back. After getting to know each other, Mio vowed to visit Bruce one evening.

Yet, rather than her showing up, an intruder bursts in and kills Bruce’s mentor. Turns out, the assailant was Mio, and she did it for money from Matsuda’s wife, who needed to steal his husband’s wealth.

Before dying, Matsuda warned Bruce not to get attached to people. This entire mess broke Bruce’s trust and made it difficult for him to associate with anyone.

Now, Bruce is lost in a world where his sentiments don’t feel like they used to. However, here’s a thought: What’s Batman’s greatest fear? That is a question worth diving into.

Batman’s Biggest Fear Lies Within His Own Emotions

Batman’s most profound fear isn’t some supervillain or a dangerous trap. It’s buried deep inside his own feelings. Indeed, Bruce Wayne went through exhaustive training to become Batman, figuring out how to battle and hide his identity.

However, there’s a side to his training that is often overlooked: his emotional control. In Batman: The Knight #8, written by Chip Zdarsky, Bruce’s training becomes the overwhelming focus. It’s revealed that he was not only instructed to control his fear but also all of his emotions.

Imagine being able to flick a switch and turn off sadness or anger whenever you want. That is the sort of control Bruce was trained to have. But here’s the catch: Bruce’s fear isn’t a mastery of his emotions. It is about what might happen if he succeeded.

That’s why he’s terrified that if he could get a handle on his feelings completely, he could fail to focus on what makes him human. He could become cold and detached. This fear isn’t simply theoretical. It’s practical as well.

On the off chance that Bruce could switch off his pain over his parent’s deaths, what’s to prevent him from giving up his main goal altogether?

Without that pain driving him, Batman could vanish altogether. So, while Bruce’s training has made him one of the most imposing legends in Gotham, it’s also left him wrestling with a fear that is as personal as it is powerful.

It’s a reminder that even the Dark Knight isn’t invulnerable to the complexities of human inclination.