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Extreme Violence Part II: Fight or Flight, It's Not Your Only Choice 

by  <http://www.humanevents.com/search.php?author_name=Ernest+Emerson>
Ernest Emerson
<http://www.humanevents.com/search.php?author_name=Ernest+Emerson>  (more by
this author)

Posted 10/26/2010 ET

 

I am sure that all of us have heard of and aware of the "fight or flight"
reaction.  Did you know that there was more, much more, to it than just
those two words?

When the brain is triggered by a spontaneous, unexpected and surprising
stimulus, certain autonomic functions go into action.  I use the term
"surprise" to denote that it must be something of distinction to trigger the
action.  In other words - a loud noise, perhaps a gunshot, explosion, or
scream is more likely to trigger the response than a whisper or a cough in a
theater.  However, that same cough will trigger the response reaction if it
comes from downstairs at two o'clock in the morning and you and your wife
are both in bed.  So, just remember that the same stimulus can produce
completely different results in different contexts.  For the purpose of
discussion I'm going to be referencing the loud, scary types of stimulus to
trigger your response.

Let's use this example; It's two o'clock in the morning and you are alone in
your pitch black hotel room.  You're just drifting off to sleep when you
hear your hotel room door close.  I guarantee, no matter who you are, fight
or flight is going to kick in at that moment.  So let's see what happens.
Your body immediately tenses up, your eyes open wide, your pulse jumps
dramatically, your breathing becomes shallow and your ears strain to hear
any micro sounds in the room.

This is the first phase of the fight or flight reaction.  Most people would
call this terror or at least a moment of stone cold fear, but it is really
not.  It is merely a physiological response to a perceived threat.  Whereas
the OODA loop is a reaction to all forms of stimulus, the fight or flight
response is activated by a perceived threat.  Just what happens when a
perceived threat is received by the mind?  There are dozens of things that
begin to take place but I will be dealing with the most obvious and the most
dramatic aspects of the response sequence.

The first response is the trigger into action of the amygdala, the primitive
section of our brain dedicated almost solely to keeping you alive.  It is
where most of our "survival instincts" reside.
One thing to understand first is that the amygdala acts much like a reflex.
As you know when a doctor strikes your knee to "test your reflexes" the
strike stimulus goes right from your knee to the base of your spine and
back.  It doesn't even involve the brain.  It's also the same reason you can
jerk your hand so fast off of a hot stove top.  You don't get the chance to
"think about it."

It's the same with the amygdala.  When it is triggered by a perceived threat
stimulus, the signal goes straight to the amygdala without higher brain
function interference.  One thing to note though is that because this is a
reactive, direct stimulus/response equation, excluding higher brain
processes, the amygdala does not know if a stimulus is an actual threat,
perceived threat, imagined threat, or no threat at all.  It just sees
threat, each and every time.  This, I venture, is your body's ultimate
failsafe mechanism.  It just kicks in.  You figure out what to do, after
it's done its job.

So, what does it do?  Please understand that a lot of these things are
happening simultaneously even though I am discussing them singly.

Cortisol and various Adrenaline hormones are immediately dumped into the
organs and muscles.  The major function of the cortisol is to increase blood
sugar levels for quick energy bursts and to lower sensitivity to pain.

And the effect of the adrenaline is to super charge the body, to give it the
ability to go to afterburners you might say and as a resultant strength and
power to move quicker, hit harder, lift more or, run away faster.  It also
gives you the shakes, the nervousness, the butterflies in your stomach and
the rush that you feel after an adrenaline dump which can last for 20-60
minutes after the threat has been removed.

Your breathing becomes more rapid, bringing more oxygen into the body.  Your
heart rate jumps dramatically pumping more blood to the muscles.  The blood
vessels near the skin and to an extent the extremities, fingers, toes, etc.,
constrict, restricting blood flow, making more blood available to the core,
strength, muscles.

The eyes dilate allowing more light in thereby increasing your ability to
see.  Your hearing becomes more acute increasing your ability to hear.  The
stomach muscles tense up to protect the middle organs.  The shoulders hunch
up to protect the vital neck area.  Your hands come up to the front to
provide protection of the eyes, neck and face and to form a roadblock in
front of the eyes.  And, your legs tense, flex, and bend slightly so that
you may spring into action, whether it is to run or stand and flight.

Then there are the "other" effects, depending upon the type of confrontation
and duration of the threat, for example in a gun fight, you may experience
tunnel vision (hyper-focus on the threat) selective auditory exclusion,
not-hearing the explosions of gun fire, yet still hearing the bolt of the
gun racking back and forth or only the sound of shell casings hitting the
floor.

And, the most puzzling of all effects - time distortion, when things seem to
be moving in slow motion.  Although things do not slow down, the brain seems
to go into a hyper-speed processing mode, clearly at a much higher rate than
normal thereby taking in much more data while the data stream of the real
time event itself does not increase or decrease.  I would describe it like
watching a normal event filmed by an ultra high speed camera and then played
back in regular speed.  I'm sure you've seen the films of drops of water
hitting the top of a puddle.  There's more to that drop than meets the,
"normal" eye.

However, these "other" effects that I just described usually only take place
if the "fight" is actually engaged, as opposed to the initial effects of
Fight or Flight, before the fight starts.
So now what happens?  The amygdala went into action giving you all these
wonderful tools to keep you alive.  What do you do with them?

This is where the higher brain starts to be engaged, past the pure,
instinctive reactive mode.  It's not quite a fully conscious decision yet
but this is when you decide what to do.  So far I have only talked about two
options, fight or flight.  Did you know that there were more; three more in
fact?  There are a total of five options that become choices as a result of
the amygdala turning its switch and as they are: fight, flight, posture,
submit or freeze.

Fight or flight are obvious, so what about the other three?  Remember one
thing, we are humans but we are still animals, so we are subject to the same
reactions as our animal relatives.  These attributes are of course, more
evident in mammals than most other creatures.  The reason that I bring this
up is that, if you've never experience the "other" three reactions, I'm sure
you've seen them in animals.  The remaining three reactions are, Posture,
Submit or Freeze, and they are all possible options to a spontaneous,
unexpected threat stimulus.  How you will react depends on the threat, the
environment, precursor events, the OODA Loop process, and your own life
experience.

Posture

The word posture defines the action of one or both combatants or potential
combatants taking action to intimidate the other.  This could be called the
face off waiting for the first one to blink.  Many times in nature and quite
regularly in humans, this is the moment where combat will be avoided by one
of the parties simply backing down.

In the animal world, including us, the purpose of this mechanism is to
prevent combat from taking place.  The reason is that if two lions engage in
actual combat there is the high probability of injury to both participants
and in the wild, any injury more serious than a scratch is probably a death
sentence.  The "law of the jungle," is that if you are sick, weak, old or
injured, you automatically become prey, even if you once were the king.

Have you ever seen a cat that was startled or squared off against another
cat?  You may have seen the cat turned sideways, its hair all puffed up with
its back arched high in the air, growling or yowling.  This is a perfect
example of the posturing process at work, where the cat, attempting to look
larger, more intimidating and more formidable to its rival.

If you have ever been confronted by a growling, snarling, mad dog with its
teeth bared, and hackles up, you were witnessing a posture process in action
and when your fight or flight mechanism was activated you may have opted for
the next option, submission.

Submit

This option is complete surrender to the will of the rival.  There are times
when the dynamics of the environment, the nature of the attacker, and
severity of the threat combine with your own experiential processes to
trigger a submissive response, the "please don't hurt me" response.  
I have personally witnessed individuals take a severe beating all the while
offering no resistance other than, yelling, "why are you doing this? Stop!
Stop! Why are you hitting me?"  I know this for a fact to be possible
because one time it was me.

In nature, animals "dropping their guard," lowering their head or gaze,
turning their back, or exposing their soft under belly to their opponent,
are exhibiting a submissive response.  In pack animals this establishes the
"pecking order" of dominant and subordinate hierarchy or rank within the
social structure of the pack.  Between two rival males it determines which
one will be the one to breed and pass on his genes.  The most dangerous
aspect of falling prey to a submission response is that you are at the
complete mercy of the "victor." In the animal world the victor generally
stops his aggressive actions, however with human beings all bets are off and
the human sociopath may decide to terminate your existence and take your
life.

Freeze

The remaining option is the "freeze." People have described it variously as
being frozen with terror paralyzed by fear, or just scared stiff.  These
words are definitely describing the freeze response, and unfortunately it is
all too real.  The obvious danger in this case is that offering no
resistance at all, not even raising your hands to protect yourself keeps you
in a completely helpless, and vulnerable position in the face of extreme
danger or violence.  This is definitely the worst position to be in when
your life is hanging in the balance.  Nonetheless it does happen.  In nature
this is described as the "deer in the headlights" syndrome.  I believe as do
many that this is the result of an "event" so unexpected, and so far out of
context that to an "inexperienced" individual the data pouring in is so
overwhelming that their human computer just cannot process it and goes into
a shutdown mode.

What do I mean by inexperienced individual?  What I mean is that a person
used to a high stress environment, lifestyle or job is not likely to be one
who experiences the "freeze."  Very few combat veterans experience the
freeze, or for that matter, ER Doctors, Policeman or fireman.  It's just
that their personal experience has forced them to make decisions in
situations that most people never, ever experience.

A majority of people misinterpret this reaction as one of fear or cowardice,
when in fact it is just one of a set of normal psychological/physiological
reactions to a threat.  Anyone who has ever been in combat - any honest
person, will tell you that have been scared and scared every time they have
experienced it.  If anyone they ever says were not scared they were either
lying or they have brain damage or - they are lying.  The difference is
simply this.  Combat experience is really the difference between being
scared and acting and being scared and freezing.  The veteran will be the
one who acts and the rookie will be the one who freezes - at least in the
beginning.

You may recall in my previous article on the sociopathic predator where I
described their experience as "They've done this before" in explaining how
they move fluidly through a high stress environment.  People who have
experienced ongoing exposure to decision making and actions in high stress
environments are much quicker to "sort it out" in the face of spontaneous
and quickly evolving life threatening situations.

However, most people do not have that historical experience and they never
will.  And this fact is exactly the reason that the 9-11 hijackers started
their deadly scheme by cutting the throats of the innocent flight attendants
to accomplish the takeover of the plane.  They were counting on the fact
that the paralysis of fear would strike the passengers and give them enough
time and control to assault the cockpit, kill the pilots and take complete
control of the planes.

So, how do you deal with all these processes that I have described here; the
OODA Loop, Fight Flight, Posture, Submit, and Freeze?  Well the first step
is by education, merely by becoming aware of what will happen starts to
shorten the time that you are caught up in them and controlled by them.

The other thing you can do is to imagine yourself being in these different
situations confronting various threats and imminent dangers.

The best and most effective way is to engage in active training where you
put yourself through high stress, realistic scenarios forcing you to work
through decision making processes and active responses, under pressure and
in the midst of a fluid, ever changing sequence of events.

What I'm describing here is the tool of Creative Visualization and how you
can use this valuable tool to enhance the effectiveness of your training
regimen.

In next week's article I will discuss how you can add this little known and
little used tool to greatly enhance your ability to confront danger and live
to tell about it.

Coming Next Week: Creative Visualization - The Secret key to effective
preparation for battle.







[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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