Self Study Lab
In this episode, I translate nervous system theory into everyday experience. This episode explores freeze and fawn as nervous system states, how they shape behavior outside of conscious choice, and why recognizing state is essential for reducing shame and reclaiming agency. In this episode, I talk about: * Freeze and fawn as adaptive mammalian survival responses * How nervous system state, not personality, drives automatic shutdown or people-pleasing * How freeze and fawn often go unnoticed because they can look like calm, competence, or kindness * Why many “high-functioning” patterns are actually nervous system strategies * How freeze can feel like going blank, numb, or oddly calm * How fawn can feel like tracking others, smoothing tension, or losing access to your own wants * Why awareness and curiosity matter more than trying to change these patterns This week’s tiny practice When you notice yourself going quiet, compliant, indecisive, or numb, pause and ask: * What state am I in right now? * What am I orienting to for safety? * Where do I feel that in my body? Free companion sheets are available if you want to track your states and patterns: egostrength.net/patterns [https://egostrength.net/patterns] DISCLAIMER The Self Study Lab Podcast is for education and personal growth. It isn’t therapy and does not replace working with a licensed mental health provider.
6 episodios
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