People have varied reactions to distressing events and circumstances. Even when there are no apparent indications, we can have intense emotional reactions to trauma. These trauma reactions can have a significant negative impact on oneโs life.
Hereโs How Trauma Reactions Can Hijack Your Life
When your nervous system has been primed by trauma, you can overreact to perceived โdangersโ that arenโt life-threatening, like when your boss questions you or someone cuts in line in front of you.
When youโre a trauma survivor, your defensive states can hi-jack your brain. Instead of helping you survive, trauma responses can become dysfunctional. They can harm your health, impair your ability to effectively handle problems, and disrupt your relationships. Knowing what your reactions are is the first step toward exercising conscious control over them.
Recent research has uncovered additional โacute stress responsesโ to trauma beyond the original fight-flight-freeze reactions identified in the early 20th century.(1) Our brains activate the sympathetic nervous system in our spinal cord to survive a perceived threat that produces physiological changes affecting our entire body, including respiration, digestion, blood flow, and muscle tension.
Instead of naturally shifting to a normal state of functioning after a life-threatening encounter, states tend to endure. When we have trauma in our past, weโre more easily aroused and our reactions take longer to settle down. When this happens, itโs possible for trauma to have an intergenerational effect. We can unknowingly live for long periods in an aroused state. Wars, famines, and genocides can negatively affect the health and longevity of the children of traumatized parents. (2)
Fight
A fight reaction tightens our muscles and jaw preparing us to overtake an assailant. Like many narcissists, when we believe an offense is the best defense, we use aggression to keep ourselves safe. We feel tense, hot with rage, and our eyes narrow readying us to fight for our life.
Acknowledging that weโre angry is a major help. When we can observe ourselves, weโre able to think and are less likely to automatically attack someoneโverbally or physically. Taking ten slow, deep breaths further calms us.
Related: When Depression Is a Symptom of Buried Anger: Hereโs How To Heal It
Flight
In a flight response, weโre highly anxious and hypervigilant. We scan the environment in preparation to flee danger. We can also attempt to flee emotions with constant busyness, perfectionism, and addictive, distracting behavior, such as binging on food, substances, work, exercise, or surfing the Internet.
We can live in constant anxiety when weโve experienced prolonged trauma. Weโre no longer present in our lives in order to avoid dealing with our emotions.ย
Freeze
If circumstances prevent us from fighting or fleeing, our system resorts to freezing. This is common in children who have no recourse when parents are angry or scolding. Our body appears frozen and our mind experiences a kind of dissociative paralysis. Weโre unable to think clearly or reply to someone well. Inside weโre frightened.
Our heart may be racing. We might feel dizzy or sweaty. This response can lead to shame when we canโt find our thoughts or words in the middle of an interview or work presentation. An extreme reaction can cause your whole system to shut down and you fall asleep.
Related: Fight, Flight, Freeze: The Pitfalls of Empathy as a Please Response
Faun
A faun response, also called submit, is common among codependents and typical in trauma-bonded relationships with abusers and narcissists. When fawning, we seek to please and appease someone to avoid conflict. Internally, weโre unable to regulate our emotions. We frantically look to someone else to normalize them.
Attachment becomes our priority, a pattern that likely began in childhood. In submitting, we go along to stay in the relationship. We canโt stand up for ourselves or get our needs met. We avoid danger and pain by accommodating someone else. We shrink, silence our voice, and repress our wants and needs. Inside, we suffer and feel inferior and unworthy.
This is a typical response to living with an abuser, especially when the abuse involves rage, sexual trauma, or interpersonal violence. Sometimes, this reaction doesnโt show up until weโre in a relationship and feel frenzied to attach to our partner. Some narcissists flip from fight to faun and crave, plead, or demand attention to soothe their desperation.ย
Flop
Like an animal caught in a predatorโs jaws, in a flop response, our muscles go limp, and we might faint, become totally disoriented, or lose control over bodily functions.
Related: Core Wounds: 12 Signs You Have an Unhealed Core Wound
ยฉ 2021 Darlene Lancer
References
Cannon, Walter (1932). Wisdom of the Body. United States: W.W. Norton & Company. ISBNย 978-0393002058 https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20190326-what-is-epigenetics ย
Written By: Darlene Lancer Originally Appeared On: What Is Codependency
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