Not exact matches
that when emotions run high at the table, children can often
enter into a fright,
flight or fight mode
We learned earlier in this article that when emotions run high at the table, children can often
enter into a fright,
flight or fight mode and, subsequently, turn off their appetite, resulting in not eating anything.
When we are upset, afraid,
or threatened, our sensory system kicks into gear and we
enter into a
fight,
flight or fright mode.
Enter the toy octopus: A team of researchers in California is exploring how the changing ocean chemistry affects a hermit crab's
fight -
or -
flight response by simulating octopus attacks in the laboratory.
And this we'll see with a lot of brain fog, memory loss, difficulty concentrating, there'll be a lot of weight gain, especially around the abdomen, and people will experience a lot of inflammatory symptoms, so that's when we'll see joint pain and muscle aches and, potentially, worsening of depression as cortisol can kind of motivate us and get us going, because, if you think about it, when we're in a state of
fight,
flight or freeze, that's an action - oriented state, once our body stops responding to that, we
enter this kind of burnout and exhaustive phase.
When we
enter into a state of «
fight or flight», digestion and nutrient absorption is halted (often including our ability to go to the bathroom
or creating a need to «flush» waste from the body), our senses are heightened, and the liver releases glycogen as fuel for our muscles to be able to react quickly — even if we are sitting at our desks!
The primary way to avoid trading with the «old» more primitive
fight or flight brain structures, and make sure that you trade with the «new» objective thinking frontal lobe part of the brain, is to make 100 % certain you plan out your trade before you
enter it.
Your brain literally
enters fight -
or -
flight mode, your heart - rate escalates, and logic and reasoning physically shut down.