Paralysed with fear: why do we freeze when frightened? - Deepstash
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The fight or flight response

The fight or flight response

The fight or flight response is a powerful survival reaction. Once we perceive danger, adrenalin increases our heart rate and move our attention toward fighting off or fleeing from the threat.

We may become so focused on that goal that we may not process any extra details and may have no clear memory of how we got away from or fought off the danger.

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Who will fight rather than flee

  • People who are more "approach motivated", such as extroverts and risk-takers, tend to perceive the reward in situations. They tend to approach a threat with a "fight" response.
  • People who are "avoidant motivated" tend to see the risks/negatives in situations and are inclined to flee a threat.
  • A third possible response is a freeze response and is often an extension of a surprise response. All energy is devoted to deciding whether the scene is a threat, a joke, or a harmless incident.

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The genuine freeze response

A freeze response is thought to happen when neither fight nor flight is available to you. When a tiger has the better of you, you feel so overwhelmed or trapped that there is no option to flee or fight.

In a real freeze response, our primitive brain takes over and immobilise us. Many people who "freeze," say they have almost no memory of the trauma. It is speculated that intense emotions prevent you from encoding information about the trauma you're facing.

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