The Connection | The Freeze Response & Trauma Healing
Survival Strategies and The Freeze Response
Did you know that, when we are faced with real or perceived threat or danger, we go into something called "survival mode", and use strategies to cope? These are unconscious methods that we use to survive difficult circumstances and emotional experiences.
Some of the survival strategies are Fight, Flight, Freeze, Submit & Attach. There is also another term called the Fawn Response.( I go into each of these in detail in a future blog- be sure to check your email in the next few days!)
The Freeze Response & Dissociation |
A Brilliant Survival Strategy
When I heard about the term "frozen iguanas", I thought about the "freeze response" also known as "numbing out", or called "dissociation".
I had just reviewed the content on the 8th Module in my Trauma Therapist Training program all about Dissociation. In that module, we review fundamentals of trauma psychotherapy; and for true healing and change, we work in steps:
STEP ONE …
With first, appreciating the survival mechanism that have been used, and get to see why it came in to being - we use Somatic and Parts Work for this. For example, you only dissociate because the environment felt too scary, so the part that numbed out/dissociated came to protect you, to help you survive.
STEP TWO:
..and then, slowly "defrosting" the freeze response or coping mechanisms used. We do this by providing support, and/or tending to the pain, memories, trauma, neglect or suffering that caused them to turn to that survival/coping, to begin with.
For example: We help you share and process the pain of emotional neglect you experienced, & as and let go of the trapped emotions, the need to dissociate/numb lessens. You begin to feel your feelings and let them move through and out of you.
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Once the body and mind feel safe and secure -with good healing work, relationship building, resources and skills - the person can slowly let go of unhelpful survival strategies (dissociation, obsessing, disconnecting, addictive behavior, anger outbursts, people pleasing, unhealthy relationship dynamics....) and use the new ways of thinking, feeling and being.