An effect of trauma

Freezing up or going blank when things get intense

When the nervous system learned that neither fighting nor fleeing was possible, some people learned to go still. Blank. Unreachable. Unable to move, speak, or act even when they desperately want to. This is not weakness or cowardice. It is one of the oldest survival responses in the nervous system. It kept you here. The problem is that it can activate in situations that are not actually life threatening, leaving you frozen when you needed to act.

One more thing worth saying plainly: this began as protection. At some point it was the thing that got you through. If it is still running now that the danger has passed, that is not a flaw in you. It is proof of how hard something once worked to keep you safe.

It can sound like

“I freeze up and go blank.” “I shut down under pressure.” “I wanted to respond or leave but I could not make myself.” “My mind goes empty when things get too intense.”

If any of those sentences live in your head too, you are in good company here.

Nothing on this page is a diagnosis, and nothing here decides what is wrong with you, because nothing is wrong with you. Something happened to you. This page exists so that when you are ready, you can find people who understand it from the inside.

You do not have to carry this alone.

Bridge of Hope Recovery is a free, anonymous, peer-led fellowship for trauma survivors. Meetings run throughout the week by phone, by video, and in person. No cost, no waitlist, no one asking for your real name.

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