04/25/2026
Your nervous system is smart. Its job is to keep you alive. When it senses danger, it doesn't stop to think. It just REACTS.
When your nervous system perceives threat, it has three primary survival responses:
FIGHT:
You sense threat → your system floods with aggression.
You become aggressive, defensive, controlling.
You want to attack, argue, dominate.
You're ACTIVATED.
FLIGHT:
You sense threat → your system floods with escape energy.
You become avoidant, busy, distracted. You want to RUN.
You leave relationships. You stay so busy you don't feel.
You're MOBILIZED.
FREEZE:
You sense threat → your system shuts down completely.
You become numb, disconnected, paralyzed.
You can't move. Can't speak. Can't feel.
You've DISAPPEARED.
Your nervous system doesn't CHOOSE these responses. It LEARNED them.
In your specific environment, with your specific circumstances, your system
developed the response that was MOST LIKELY to keep you alive.
If you grew up in an environment where aggression was normal, FIGHT became your
default.
If you grew up in an environment with unpredictable danger you could sometimes
escape, FLIGHT became your strategy.
If you grew up in an inescapable, overwhelming situation, FREEZE became your
only option.
WHICH ONE IS YOUR PRIMARY RESPONSE?
Most people have one they default to.
You might shift between all three depending on the situation.