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The Fight or Flight Responseby Mark Sichel, LCSW, PsyberSquareDo you recall a time when you've been in danger, or feared that you could be in danger? Do you remember how the adrenalin pumped through your body, and how you quickly you went into action? Your heart likely beat rapidly and your breath became faster. This is a primitive response called the "Fight or Flight" response. It is an inborn genetic response which helps us to protect ourselves throughout our lives. The surge of adrenalin gives us the strength we need to either get the heck out of there, or stand our ground and fight off the danger. The fight/flight response is one of survival. You might recognize the description of someone in fight/flight mode if you suffer from panic attacks. People having panic attacks experience the same physical symptoms as a person in immediate physical danger. Panic attacks are a type of fight/flight response. Once this response "kicks in," we tend to perceive anything and everything around us as a potential threat to our safety. When we are in fight/flight mode, our brain chemistry is altered. The part of the brain which controls our rational thoughts is bypassed, and we move right into "attack" or "run" mode. Medical emergencies, building evacuations, and automobile accidents are all situations in which the fight/flight response would be likely to kick in. This makes sense. There are obvious, immediate, potential threats to your physical being in all of those scenarios. Why then do people having panic attacks go into fight/flight mode? Often a panic attack will seemingly come "out of the blue," with no external threats or dangers that are immediately obvious. It is precisely the fact that there is no obvious
source of danger that intensifies the fear of a person about to have a panic
attack. The danger feels almost palpable, and yet it is invisible. If something
is invisible, how do you decide whether to flee or fight? How can we run from
danger when we don't know what, where or who it is? How can we fight when we
don't know what we're fighting? This is the psychological birth of a panic attack:
a fight/flight response with nowhere to fly and no one to fight, given our unawareness
of the enemy. Whatever is scaring you is going on in your unconscious. None of us want to have panic attacks, yet
they occur. Generally the danger lurking in our unconscious, has to do with
feelings, wishes, and ideas which we feel will put us into danger. The danger
is not a physical one, but it is just as real to us. These "lurkers" in the
recesses of our minds set off a complicated set of emotional and physical reactions
within us. In another instance, a popular movie released
in 1978, "An Unmarried Woman," told the story of a woman's struggles following
her divorce. In one memorable scene, the woman, played by Jill Clayburgh, has
a panic attack in Bloomingdale's. She asks the circle of on-lookers if anyone
has a valium. What we can extrapolate from her behavior is that the fear of
not being taken care of was her "lurker," given that the outcome of the panic
attack was that she was able to be taken care of at that moment. © 2002 Mark Sichel, LCSW Mark Sichel, LCSW is a psychotherapist
in private practice in New York City and a Licensed Clinical Social Worker.
He created the award winning website, Psybersquare.com in the hopes of offering
people struggling with emotional problems the chance to have access to the
finest self-help materials, licensed experts and a community of support.
Mark is the author of Healing from Family Rifts, a guide to mending
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