What It Feels Like To Be In the Freeze Survival Response - Hope For Repair and Rewiring

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 195

  • @DrAimieApigian
    @DrAimieApigian  6 лет назад +13

    Want to learn more? Check out my blog draimie.com/blog/

    • @gratefulkm
      @gratefulkm Год назад

      The Truth is that the cortex,(not your imagined Self) the biology has locked something away from your imagined self,
      your imgained self has no control over the biology, the biology has taken control
      The Biology is waiting for you to physically CALM DOWN, not for your Left PFC to imagine its calm
      TEST
      You are physcially calm if you are breathing through your nose, if you are in a state of physical panic TALKING to your self you are breathing through your mouth QED
      You need to maintain at least 95% of time breathing through your nose
      NOTHING ELSE MATTERS
      you have just been given an order , DO NOTHING calm down, focus 100% on your breathing through your nose
      you have no other jobs, no other commitments, no other delusions,
      just calm down, meditate focus , breathing calm through your nose all the time
      Then maybe if you really work at getting as calim and as inactive as you can then maybe the cortex will decide it might let you heal a little
      And whats been locked away starts to open
      I REPEAT the imaginary imagined self created by language has no invoment in the process, its not important enough, your tiny little left PFC you lock yourself away in

    • @lovelivelaugh7712
      @lovelivelaugh7712 18 дней назад

      I tried but it says "not found" when I click on it. 😢

  • @farmher95
    @farmher95 5 лет назад +148

    You are the first person to EVER put into words how it feels for me. My Dr says that the heaviness is depression but I don't think it is. You hit the nail on the head for me. Thank you. I look forward to listening to more of your videos.

    • @onetwo234
      @onetwo234 Год назад +2

      It’s so similar yet so different!!

    • @hollywood1426
      @hollywood1426 Год назад +3

      I feel the same… look into poly vegal theory. x

    • @judebaba1627
      @judebaba1627 Год назад +3

      Exactly the word is heaviness I ve experienced that my entire life…yes I have admitted to being depressed after loosing both parents at a tender age….the heaviness may be connected to unresolved life questions and mysteries unique and exclusive to you. You become a sympath that disgusts everyone around you which aggravate your situation suicide is not that easy but I was there a couple times…God strengthen us

  • @lauriemtz8616
    @lauriemtz8616 Месяц назад

    I went into a freeze response after my mom passed away. I don’t work and I laid in bed till noon for a year. Now I experience chronic pain in my flutes, hips and back and neck and unwanted weight loss so I don’t sleep. I’ve been told my nervous system is fried. Not sure what to do when I’m not getting much sleep from the pain. I’m so tired and keep going back to the bed even though that makes it worse. I never meant to neglect my physical health I just had no appetite Doctors want me to go into the psychiatric ward for uncontrolled anxiety. Been there done that.. Those places are toxic. I don’t feel well. 😢 somatic would be great.

  • @katk1958
    @katk1958 10 месяцев назад

    Any important deadline causes me to freeze. For instance I've got to be strong enough to go to Thanksgiving with my family this year. I want to go so very badly. My freeze causes my already very weak body (I have Myasthenia Gravis, a totally destroyed thyroid from Hashimoto, and destroyed adrenal glands from decades of prednisone), to almost become paralyzed. I have developed this freeze thing just the last year. It's a living nightmare.

  • @jenniferdeschepper1165
    @jenniferdeschepper1165 Год назад

    I sleep daily 1,5 to recover from my daily freez 😮‍💨

    • @DrAimieApigian
      @DrAimieApigian  Год назад

      This work can be hard, but keep being open to what your body is saying!

  • @attheranch873
    @attheranch873 Год назад +72

    If you don’t have time to watch the whole thing, here’s what she said: when you go in to the freeze response, just let it happen rather than fight it. She found that if she did that she came out of it more quickly.

  • @tinahojnik7552
    @tinahojnik7552 2 года назад +76

    HI Aimie, I spent most of my childhood in the freeze state and as an adult I have been struggling with fatigue a lot. I used to feel so paralyzed in life and would often go into periods of ‘I dont care’ or ‘I give up’ states. I thought feeling like this was normal, until I stared uncovering my childhood traumas. Thank you for sharing. Much love!

    • @AnnetteHolroyd
      @AnnetteHolroyd Год назад +2

      Me tooo , sorry I accidentally pressed thumbs down but meant thumbs up vs🙃

    • @judebaba1627
      @judebaba1627 Год назад +3

      Pls how can one dissolve this childhood traumas I can’t get the thoughts of being cheater and abused in life as a child. It seems cheap healing from this exposes one to becoming an abuser cos everyone perceives weakness if one restrains.
      Life and time is running off
      Maybe I was born in the wrong world

  • @johnbrenner6380
    @johnbrenner6380 Год назад +36

    That sense of isolation and not interacting in groups, for me is also coupled with tremendous sense of nervousness, fear of my peers, due to severe shaming and bullying from my childhood

  • @MishaIsha1
    @MishaIsha1 7 месяцев назад +15

    My physical hatha yoga and pranayam practice (which took me a LONG time to commit to) was the first thing that took me out of what I called my 'catatonic' depression. This was more than 25 years ago, and because of them, I've never gone that frozen. I just never knew that it was the freeze response to trauma, which was exactly what i was going through. It's so good to hear this as this is my trauma response, and i still deal with it. This helps take away the shame and gives hope. You are a gift to me. Thank you 🙏

  • @brocktoon8
    @brocktoon8 Год назад +63

    This basically sounds like what it feels like as an autistic person masking. This is very similar to how it feels. I am only relaxed/authentic when I am alone or with my best friend. With all other social interactions I feel just how you describe. Except there is a very powerful constant fear/vigilance the whole time I am forced to be socially interacting. This is why I prefer to just be alone or with animals.

    • @Alex-oy6ci
      @Alex-oy6ci Год назад +9

      Yea, I thought that same analogy with autistic masking in my own behavioral observations as well.
      Navigating the world and surviving, slash also trying not to show other people where one is actually at, for their sake as the situation is never really appropriate anyway, but never is. And by showing, there's a possibility of further 'damage' per se.
      It's just a survival strategy, definitely hadn't felt any guilt by doing so. After all, I don't think the other person would handle my situation, so if they were to judge, I wouldn't hold their opinion of any value anyway.
      Part of the process.

  • @playinglifeoneasy9226
    @playinglifeoneasy9226 5 месяцев назад +8

    56 years in freeze. It’s been years since I’ve been under that threat but it’s always there because I was in danger for a really long time, like a cheap paint job-scratch the surface and there it is.

  • @andreagonyeaurodriguez4831
    @andreagonyeaurodriguez4831 Год назад +18

    I feel like I have been in this state for a year or so. I am frozen mentally and physically I believe. I read all the books, watch all the videos and I am well aware of all the ways I am supposed to help myself to feel better BUT I cannot execute anything I have learned. I don't have any support or family members or a spouse. I am divorced, 50, still raising teenagers and feel flatlined and overwhelmed by any life skill or task I am responsible for doing. I procrastinate everything , paying bills, phone correspondence, even daily showering.....I don't know what to do anymore.

    • @amytaylor2739
      @amytaylor2739 Год назад +5

      Recovery can be very slow with trauma...and I can relate to having "learned" all the things and getting frustrated that I cannot just DO them...the tragic irony is that trying to make yourself do it is in itself reinforicing the trauma. There is another trauma therapist on here named Irene Lyon and she talks about the importance of titration in recovery, and I believe it is very wise. You might want to look that up at some point when you feel ready.

    • @andybreedlove
      @andybreedlove 7 месяцев назад +3

      Same 😮

    • @leaburns9599
      @leaburns9599 7 месяцев назад +3

      ❤ 😊 *** Please try 🙏 to 😊 ❤ attend a Christian ✝️ 🙏 or similar 🙏 type 🙏 of Church or Bible or Prayer Meeting 🙏 & it will most likely really help you to feel Happier & Better * in every 😊 😀 ☺ possible way. 😊 ❤ Please ask the
      people there * to Pray 🙏 🙌 for You & they will be more than 😊 Happy😊 ❤ to do that for You * Please Remember ' 💗 ❤ 💖 You are a child 💖 💗 ❤ 💕 💓 of the Most High God' 💖 & he truly LOVES 💘 YOU 😊 ❤ for the Wonderful 👏 💖 ❤ person you are!

    • @jau-yonchen6492
      @jau-yonchen6492 Месяц назад

      @@amytaylor2739 Great Point. It's fantastic to know that slow recovery is a common situation, especially for folks who have experienced severe trauma!

  • @mushky3940
    @mushky3940 2 года назад +40

    I'm in the freeze response daily at least half the day. I do so much therapy, I hope I can heal. Thanks for this video, making me feel less lonely

    • @andybreedlove
      @andybreedlove Год назад +3

      How are you doing now? What’s helped? I’m stuuuuuuck 😩

    • @andybreedlove
      @andybreedlove 5 месяцев назад

      I’m sorry… no, am absolutely smashed still. Worse even, despite trying SO hard. Sending love bro 🙏🏼

    • @sk.khairuzzamanrizu3976
      @sk.khairuzzamanrizu3976 5 месяцев назад

      @@andybreedlove bro did you take any meds or any therapy?? Feeling sad for you… I’m also extremely frustrated. Dunno what to do

    • @andybreedlove
      @andybreedlove 5 месяцев назад

      @@sk.khairuzzamanrizu3976I am drug damaged from years of strong antidepressants that I came off of abruptly 26 months ago… Am in Post Acute Withdrawal Syndrome (paws)… and very damaged. Therapy doesn’t touch the sides - I can’t even connect with it or let anything go, my body is in survival mode/shock 😬

  • @horgecondaliza6644
    @horgecondaliza6644 6 лет назад +33

    This video is almost serendipitous for me. Your episodes you were talking about is me all over. Ill go into total shutdown and completely dissociate and cant function for a couple of weeks. It would scare the crap out of me. But since i finally became more aware of what was going on with me in my body its so much easier to catch it and be able to come out of it! Im really excited about it as well

    • @cathychase663
      @cathychase663 Год назад

      same

    • @judebaba1627
      @judebaba1627 Год назад

      I have reservations for being aware of these moments.
      I get advice that the more I am aware of it the more it dictates my sense of judgement and most at times it is used against me😔😔😔

    • @andybreedlove
      @andybreedlove 7 месяцев назад +2

      How do you ‘come out of it’? 🙏🏼🫨

  • @marietrudeau224
    @marietrudeau224 Год назад +17

    At 65 and after years of inner work I realized I had trauma early in life (with no specific memories of them) and that since then, my coping mechanism has been the freeze response. A couple of years ago it escalated to a collapse/shut down episode that was terrifying. After recognizing what was happening and learning to work with these reactions, I have made tremendous progress and feel more alive and energetic than ever before. Thank you for this video, it always feels good and is helpful to learn that we're not the only ones dealing with this and that there are ways to grow through these states and behaviors.

    • @WelfredRomeo
      @WelfredRomeo Год назад

      Your comments are worth viewing but we aren't friends yet. Would love to see your take on more topics like this📌 and I hope you're feeling much better. ❤

    • @rochellea9652
      @rochellea9652 11 месяцев назад

      It's called burn down overload. Not like autistic meltdown at all. Big difference.

  • @yasadolescencerenaissance
    @yasadolescencerenaissance 2 года назад +13

    thank you so, so much. you have described it perfectly well. i belive i've been in freeze for the past 7 years, which basically stole my teen years. i am recovering today, trying to get my life back❤️

  • @joyfries8252
    @joyfries8252 2 года назад +17

    Thank you thank you thank you! Was diagnosed 30 yrs ago with CFS & have suffered sooo many years! Have addressed all the medical but with no relief! I now understand the freeze response thanks to the 21 day journey. You have given me hope...finally...to have a life!

  • @dottio3830
    @dottio3830 3 года назад +15

    thank you, this is me. I can’t seem to change it, I’m all alone with no support, have lost relationships and my ‘sensitivities’ get on people’s nerves. I don’t want to live,

    • @katyk7264
      @katyk7264 Год назад +6

      Hello Dotti. Just read your comment. You wrote it 1 year ago. I just hope you are ok and have received help on your healing journey. Hope to hear from you xxx

    • @dottio3830
      @dottio3830 Год назад +8

      ​@@katyk7264 I am slightly better, thank you so much for your wishes. Though not out of the woods, will hope to get help w/ psychedelic assisted therapy.

  • @BlunderBuns
    @BlunderBuns Год назад +15

    When I go into freeze, which is 95% of every waking hour, I also have this strong shame component where I feel like a monster. When people look at me I can see them react to my shell shocked face with their own fear and people pretty much avoid me. I’m working on it but it’s pretty difficult. I have been unable to hold down a job and I’m pretty much homeless now. I’m glad you are getting better, that gives me hope.

    • @andybreedlove
      @andybreedlove 7 месяцев назад +1

      😮Me too, how are you doing now? 🕊️

    • @BlunderBuns
      @BlunderBuns 7 месяцев назад +5

      @@andybreedlove A good deal better but still no where near healthy. Started taking anti depressants. I no longer wish to not exist every minute of the day, only once every few days or so now. I can actually get some things done in my life now and sometimes I even feel comfortable around people which never happened before.

    • @lisbethbird8268
      @lisbethbird8268 7 месяцев назад

      That's great progress and sets a beautiful example@@BlunderBuns

    • @leaburns9599
      @leaburns9599 7 месяцев назад

      ❤ 😊 *** LOVE 💘 ❤ 💕 YOURSELF & Encourage Others that you Can Trust * to Accept & Love 💘 ❤ you * also 😊 ❤ 😊 ❤

  • @annborn6563
    @annborn6563 6 лет назад +42

    Thank you so much for talking about fatigue & trauma! I've had so many doctors tell me there's nothing wrong with me yet these fatigue episodes have been debilitating

    • @judebaba1627
      @judebaba1627 Год назад

      Absolutely I had to do an EEG assessment, I lost sleep and lives i take my critical moments on study and sleep some times I don’t wanna wake up😄😄😄

  • @user-vw6xp5nl6t
    @user-vw6xp5nl6t Год назад +12

    Basically, youre learning to accept and love the traumatised parts of you that are in freeze. Im learning this too -- thank you for sharing.

  • @carolina6683
    @carolina6683 Год назад +4

    If I give in to it, I will be on the sofa for months on end. I wish I knew how to overcome freeze.

  • @michaelwyman1187
    @michaelwyman1187 3 года назад +11

    I have been trying to fix myself the last 40 years. It seems like I'm back in undergrad studies, doing iterations in quantitative analytical chemistry. We would get one answer, plug it back into the original equation, get a closer answer, plug it back in, until we came up with the closest practical answer that we could live with. I started with some pretty far out answers, and it's exciting to be getting this close to an answer I can live with. Dr Apigian describes the freeze response better than anyone I've ever heard, even though my body does a few different things with it. I can't wait to dig more into what she has to say, and see where this iteration leads me.

  • @karenrodgers56
    @karenrodgers56 Год назад +7

    Thank you Dr Aimie,
    Fascinating. I'm from the 1970s and we just didn't do any of this healing stuff then:) You just got on with it. I'm not quite sure how, but we did. At what cost, I am not sure.
    I remember so vividly the aftermath of having to attend big social occasions, at which I would feel as though a real, physical vice gripped the back of my head;
    and everything felt very dream-like and distant. I like people but it would leave me feeling out of it and exhausted for a long time afterwards.
    Certainly in Britain the most often told lie in English is "I'm fine". You and Carly Jones are doing a vital job of helping people
    articulate how they are feeling and what they need in terms of transition times and realistic expectations without constantly having to apologise.
    Thank you,
    warmest regards,
    Karen

  • @topicandatonic6136
    @topicandatonic6136 3 года назад +11

    My heart breaks for how you share your experience. Having seen you on video today and here three years or so ago this is testimony to the work you have done. You describe this so well. It’s how I feel. You have done so much to explain my own symptoms. I am now taking greater care of myself. I’ve stopped driving myself through the stop light of life. My override button doesn’t work any more. I have to stop. It helps. I’m learning and I too have noticed that I’m not ‘knocked out’ for quite as long as I used to be. It’s a difficult thing when your mind has deadlines and you’re not achieving quite what you want in life as fast as you’d like it but this is important work. An investment in the future. Thank you.

  • @luciebontemps1319
    @luciebontemps1319 5 месяцев назад +2

    Waow! thank you so much for clarifying as this is so important for everyone to be aware! I am glad you are better and hopefully me too one day I will get out of big trauma chronic responses in which I have been stuck since childhood. You bring big info and hope in this world! Take care 🙏🏼✨️ Lucy

  • @leaburns9599
    @leaburns9599 7 месяцев назад +2

    ❤😊❤ *** Please keep 🙏 Going Forward * & it will All Fall Into 🙏 Place * for you one ❤ 😊 day!

  • @carrielinn7505
    @carrielinn7505 Год назад +10

    I am just learning about the freeze response and past trauma. I am so grateful to you for so eloquently putting your experience and wisdom into this video. I thought I was the only one with those symptoms. I too have been dealing with debilitating fatigue, and when the fatigue hits so does depression. I have exhausted the medical route, as they tell me there's nothing wrong with me and then treat me with antidepressants, which make it worse. I have also worked with numerous nutritional and functional medicine doctors, with limited success. Thank you for helping me find the missing pieces.

  • @HealwithRannn
    @HealwithRannn 3 года назад +12

    Thanks for sharing. Invaluable ❤️ For the past two weeks I have been in this dissociative state, and I'm learning how to discharge this energy. I guess like you said, just let our body fully sink into and let it naturally ride through the full cycle.

  • @jurgenkandziora8478
    @jurgenkandziora8478 Месяц назад +1

    08/14/24. This is the key: she let herself feel the freeze response more fully. And that cut it short to one day! Why? Because she was not alone, but in the company of people going through similar experiences right there, with her. Overcoming Isolation is key. Sharing with people who are open is key. Thank you. This already makes me hopeful. I know what to do next. Find or create a support group.

  • @Alex-oy6ci
    @Alex-oy6ci Год назад +5

    Yea, I found relaxing into and accepting that s.ui.cde was going to happen, a strange but enough of a 'releif' feeling that gave a form of hope. Not an approach recommended to anyone lol.
    But that, allowing and accepting the response and seeing how one is, I've found has been good in other circumstances also.
    It's like, so much work and processing needs to happen prior to, 'exposure therapy' of situations that the brain think is similar but is actually quite different, in order to learn that these other situations are safe, and can be explored without the need for being as cautious, and get to enjoy all of the colour that the situation has to offer.
    With a few setbacks prior, I'm close to rehaving this currently.
    Life is good. It's good to be here.

  • @percubit10
    @percubit10 11 месяцев назад +4

    I have been in a freez mode for a long time, And I feel isolated.

  • @mosher121
    @mosher121 Год назад +7

    Thank you for the wisdom of talking when you're experiencing it. That must have been a challenge to put yourself on display like that. It was so helpful to see because there are so many things about this that just have to be observed and I can see it clearly that you were experiencing it at the time. That is so validating and insightful, and I'm so grateful to you for doing that. I've lived my whole life in freeze mode. I started saying, "I don't care" to just about everything in life when I was about 6 and I never knew why.

  • @avathemis9878
    @avathemis9878 3 месяца назад +1

    I have always felt defective for being so tired. Before I had children, I would lie in bed for days at a time, only getting up to go to work. I sometimes would sleep for 18 hours a day. Now I have children, I cannot do that. But I wish I could sometimes.

  • @terrinorrell9911
    @terrinorrell9911 2 года назад +7

    my freeze after shock looks like a physical coma, lay down, can't move, sleep shutdown, very cold. help

  • @elkadosh4726
    @elkadosh4726 4 года назад +9

    Dr. Aimee, thank you so very much for sharing your story as so many Med Pro's do not but I find it helpful & relatable. I'm finding with each of your vlogs I am gaining so much more ground for healing that cannot be gotten from the current medical/mental health system, which I find terribly tragic for those suffering daily. A thousand thank you's for your wonderful works, please never stop! You give so much hope!

  • @peachesmcgee4795
    @peachesmcgee4795 Год назад +5

    This is interesting stuff to me. My dad was severely mentally ill when I was growing up and when I went to stay at his house I would feel sleepy and have to go to bed during the day.This explains it well.Thanks!

  • @dangerkh1525
    @dangerkh1525 Год назад +5

    I have been suffering from fatigue for over 25 years
    I tried every diet and medications
    But this makes a lot of sense
    Because sometimes a single sentence can send me into a spiral of fatigue and depression
    Your videos are very insightful

    • @freedomwarrior5087
      @freedomwarrior5087 11 месяцев назад

      Look into narcissistic abuse, there you will find answers. Study your family history.

    • @andybreedlove
      @andybreedlove 7 месяцев назад

      Same, absolutely

  • @nastasiaa23
    @nastasiaa23 Год назад +6

    For years I have been searching for something/someone that can teach me all the essential things I need to know when healing trauma and I have found it here, all in one place, in your modules. Thank you, the world needs more of this ❤

    • @DrAimieApigian
      @DrAimieApigian  Год назад +5

      Thank you for your kind words and I'm thrilled to hear that my modules have been helpful in your journey towards healing trauma. I know trauma can have a lasting impact on one's physical and mental health, and it's important to have access to resources that can provide a a safe guidedance to the path towards healing. It's encouraging to hear that my modules have been able to provide that for you. Remember, healing is a journey, and I encourage you to continue seeking support and resources as you navigate this process. Keep up the good work and thank you for spreading the message that the world needs more of this kind of support!

  • @davidbrown6056
    @davidbrown6056 5 лет назад +16

    Thank you so much for being real with your freeze response.
    During my childhood Trauma / s abuse I froze. Never new what it was till 50 yrs later. Now I can face it and realize I have triggers and can learn why I feel so bad after. What you described, I now know why my body aches and pains come on. I’m going to learn more about this condition and look to get better. Learn and practice tools I learn to get me out sooner.

  • @DrPatriciaWorby
    @DrPatriciaWorby 4 месяца назад +1

    Someone who talks my language! I'm working with clients and teaching practitioners on the association of emotional trauma (particularly attachment trauma) and CFS/ME. Thank you for your information, it's so needed.

  • @sallykarasov1402
    @sallykarasov1402 18 часов назад

    That was amazing! Thank you so much for sharing the minute details of your freeze response. I identified with everything that you described and it made so much sense hearing it put into words.

  • @keyannalee2432
    @keyannalee2432 2 года назад +4

    I never heard anyone explain it this way!

  • @palmamingozzi5736
    @palmamingozzi5736 Год назад +4

    I slept for a week completely exhausted. Slowly one day at a time I began to go outside and begin my routine again. Thanks for your explanation of your experience. It helps.

  • @julietstein2016
    @julietstein2016 Год назад +2

    Very interesting. Suffering from CFS for 2 years. Am just now understanding how past traumas are still driving my nervous system disregulation. Thank you!

  • @fionasmith5767
    @fionasmith5767 Год назад +3

    I had my first extended experience of "freeze" during my Somatic Experiencing training. We were going through the pandemic, my mother had died, I felt very isolated where I was living and was having to 'stay strong' for my son, bereaved father and my clients. My experience of freeze manifested physically - brain fog, exhaustion, lack of drive and motivation and a literally frozen shoulder.
    When I was finally in a place where I felt supported and safe - ie during and after the training - I was able to slowly and consistently embody my experience of grief, loss and isolation and return to far greater vitality and strength. I'm so grateful to this body of work and what it's doing for me, my clients and family.

  • @Rain9Quinn
    @Rain9Quinn 6 месяцев назад +2

    i went through a horrible time after my dad died, when my mom was taken by my brother & isolated, with dementia, against her will, & her condition never addressed (so he could manipulate her for her & dads money) When she was so far gone they let me visit periodically & after each visit, only a couple hours allowed, and 3 hours of driving involved, i’d be unable to do anything when i returned and often collapsed in bed for a couple days. It was such a time suck, as well as an emotional & physical drain. I can see similar reactions to other trauma triggers. Thanks for sharing ❤

  • @jean6460
    @jean6460 Год назад +1

    Thank you Dr Aimie🙏🏼♥️ Do you work one on one with people?

  • @denisf.1744
    @denisf.1744 3 года назад +3

    Hi Dr.Aimie,I can relate to all you are talking about in this video as I can feel something that is like something that happened to me relating to all of it that really happened,and now it”s like addictive,and it”s become accepting,and the symptoms you describe are the same that I had,and now I get triggered not knowing where it”s coming from,and it”s almost like addicting,and won”t never go away as I can”t let go of it all,and a lot of it relates to a great amount of complex traumas that I suffer from,thank you for your videos,love Denny😘🙏⭐️and🌙🧡🦋

  • @trucuriousity
    @trucuriousity 5 месяцев назад +2

    Have been in this for years off and on. Lately it seems to be here to stay. Haven't done the dishes in two weeks. No clean clothes to wear. I work, then crash on the couch with nothing left. Don't see an end in sight. Can't stop shaming myself for it.

    • @BunnyRabit-yo3lx
      @BunnyRabit-yo3lx 2 месяца назад

      One thing that helped me was doing much smaller washing loads and having a bunch of clothes horses close to the machine. If you only wash three items in one load that's a start. Then you hang them out right next to the machine. That can be effort enough. You might have a clean shirt and undies the next day and you can congratulate yourself for that and feel how good it is to have some clean things on! Gradually you will be able to do more. Hope this helps.❤ Also the shaming is the first thing that has to go. You are doing your best. Get help where you need. If you can afford to pay for someone to help that's an option too. Today's work loads are too high.

  • @alchemydp
    @alchemydp Год назад +2

    Great advice here. It’s taken me a long time to put these pieces together. I finally can see the mood symptoms connected to the thoughts and physical fatigue and take a time out as you describe and come out of it much more quickly. Pushing it away only makes it worse. Sometimes it’s as simple as gently moving outdoors or to a sunny window to let my body connect with nature. Thanks Dr A

  • @julieburkhardt61
    @julieburkhardt61 Год назад +3

    triggers for me are anticipated conflict, and then if the conflict actually occurs, I feel really defensive and wrong. I dislike conflict and have trouble calmly explaining or defending my position.

    • @WelfredRomeo
      @WelfredRomeo Год назад

      I hope everything works out fine eventually. Your comments are worth viewing but we aren't friends yet. Would love to see your take on more topics like this 💙

    • @lenoredavi6137
      @lenoredavi6137 11 месяцев назад

      Sometimes, minimizing contact is the best way forward.

    • @jau-yonchen6492
      @jau-yonchen6492 Месяц назад

      You aren't alone...There are folks out there who are exactly like ourselves when it comes to dealing with conflict and drama!

  • @sandyp4123
    @sandyp4123 3 месяца назад

    Thank you Dr. Aimie. That was really helpful. Your Videos provide such a resource in times of freeze and shut down. I am slowly learning to adjust. But the freeze and the pain feel so overwhelming and bad sometimes.
    Best regards ❤from Bavaria

  • @Kameldzdzdz
    @Kameldzdzdz 4 месяца назад

    Im in the freez réponse for years 💔

  • @dubravKA1111
    @dubravKA1111 3 месяца назад

    Thank you so much for being authentic and sharing your own experience. I highly appreciate it and it helped me, too. Love. 💛

  • @_cr8ive_
    @_cr8ive_ 6 месяцев назад

    People around me can be having fun and enjoy interaction, whilst I am in a living hell 24 / 7...nobody knows...

  • @kayduren9779
    @kayduren9779 Месяц назад

    This is fascinating. Thank you. When in the 21 day journey I received permission to be fatigued in response to letting go of the guards I had used for years, I got it. This Freeze response adds a new dimension to that understanding.

  • @josephmattus3602
    @josephmattus3602 Год назад +2

    Thank you so much. You described how I feel to the tee. This explains so much. I’ve struggled through this my whole life. I’m feeling hopeful ❤

  • @Medietos
    @Medietos 6 месяцев назад

    First time here. Who have you worked with helping /treating you? Or have you been able to work on your own only?Have you been having an OK social , normal life apart from it? I don't get why I haven't got help all the decades of seeking, writing applications, researchingand self-helping. With getting negligence, deception, withholding and mistreatment instead, despite being proactive, willing, gifted enough and able to contribute if given a chance. HAve you been working as a Dr meanwhile?

  • @sue5158
    @sue5158 8 месяцев назад

    After a triggering event, I get disassociated, my body is heavy and aches. Some of my abuse was physical. I always thought it was body memories of abuse. Idk.

  • @hsj.124
    @hsj.124 2 месяца назад

    How can i remove my chronic shoulder tightness, pain and heaviness 😭😭? Pls help?

  • @RovingReader
    @RovingReader 4 месяца назад

    I call these crashes and your video helped me so much in seeing why I will crash at times! Thank you!

  • @goodgemini9803
    @goodgemini9803 Год назад +2

    You feel scared.

  • @avathemis9878
    @avathemis9878 3 месяца назад

    Doctor, what do we do if we have children? I too feel disconnected and distracted, which makes me feel like a terrible mother, which makes it even worse. My house is a mess and it causes so much shame for me.

  • @Highvibes777
    @Highvibes777 11 месяцев назад

    I've been in freeze since mom passed July 28....

  • @aine_lagan
    @aine_lagan Год назад +1

    Mines lasting 2.5 months so far :(

  • @larryrudisill1521
    @larryrudisill1521 11 месяцев назад

    I become non-functional for a day or two or more. And can't make myself do anything.

  • @SARAHLYNN-eu2iv
    @SARAHLYNN-eu2iv 9 месяцев назад

    I always knew there was so much wrong with me and hate myself when I go into freeze and can’t explain to ppl 😭

  • @Altfel888
    @Altfel888 Месяц назад

    Thank you Aimie! God bless you!

  • @ginamadeo8501
    @ginamadeo8501 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for your honesty. It always helps to know you’re not alone on feeling this way. I realize this was 5 years ago and I’ve listened to your more recent stuff too. The journey feels sooo long sometimes.

  • @nancythran9353
    @nancythran9353 2 месяца назад

    Omg! This is me I had no idea ! Thought I was just down in the dumps

  • @NganHoang-dy8el
    @NganHoang-dy8el 11 месяцев назад +1

    The way i just have discorver about getting over a freeze response is: let our body rest. Including soothing the body. I found out that when i get flashback, the body get so tensed up that i can’t even sleep well. The tension stored in the body without me realizing. And I get mind fog, fatigue faster than normal. Our body won’t calm down naturally like healthy people. So we have to actively release the stress out of the body. And leting go completely, ease the body completely.
    Also, mindfulness works wonders. By staying in the complete present, the brain will stop feeling in danger, we get grounded and can work on relaxing the body.
    Hope this helps.

  • @anavartalitis8425
    @anavartalitis8425 Год назад +1

    A nervous response to a trigger... I can relate to having stopped caring, being in so great a pain as to stop moving. Fearing to move for fear of feeling...of remembering the feeling of feeling it. That must be the way to thawing 😊

  • @lovelivelaugh7712
    @lovelivelaugh7712 18 дней назад

    Thank you for for the information! ❤

  • @hollywood1426
    @hollywood1426 Год назад +1

    Wow this video is so helpful! Thank you for talking about this. I experience this and it takes 4 days for me to get out of it. Anti inflammatory food like tummeric greens and beetroot and olive oil help me. x

  • @mackballantyne4251
    @mackballantyne4251 3 года назад +1

    Thanks you for sharing your personal journey, valuable information. You give all of us hope for a healthy happy future. Much gratitude.

  • @MariaZap-wq2zz
    @MariaZap-wq2zz 5 месяцев назад

    Thanks for sharing, so helpful!

  • @jessicamahan8166
    @jessicamahan8166 Год назад +1

    This information is so incredibly valuable to me, thank you.

  • @stephenbond5115
    @stephenbond5115 11 месяцев назад +1

    I feel like I have lived in “freeze and fatigue” so about 40 years 😢

  • @kimberlygray1916
    @kimberlygray1916 Год назад +1

    Thank you for your vulnerability and authenticity to share Dr. Aimie!

  • @arush2746
    @arush2746 3 месяца назад

    Ads less than a minute in 🙄 RUclips is useless now

  • @chrysanthemumfan214
    @chrysanthemumfan214 Год назад +2

    I have childhood trauma from relinquishment and adoption, and my adoptive mother, whom I loved very dearly (she is now gone), would call me "lazy". But it wasn't that I didn't want to be productive. I know now that I was in the "freeze" response. This is my response whenever I feel afraid or threatened. I don't fight and I don't flee. I just freeze, cannot think of a single thing to say until hours later when I've been away from the situation and can thing of a gazillion helpful responses I could have said...
    And I've suffered far too many blows in these past ten years. In the past 4 years, I've lost my parents, my birthmother, my parents-in-law, two aunts, an uncle, and our family dog. My child has come out as a transman and is about to have gender-confirming surgery. Has been on testosterone for months and his voice is now permanently altered from the exquisitely clear, sweet soprano voice I'm accustomed to hearing. Parents have to grieve when their child comes out as trans - it doesn't mean we are bigots. It means dealing with the loss of the future we thought we would have, with the potential loss the dream of becoming grandparents, the loss of the name we selected with such great love and care. My therapist, who fully endorses queer theory, tells me it is necessary for me to grieve, but not to tell my child about it. We love & support our trans child fully and are going to be there (flying across teh country) for his surgery in support of his own dreams. My birthmother died while still rejecting reunion, never having heard my voice nor seen me since the day of my birth. At the time I learned of her death, I was composing a last-ditch-effort letter to her with the aid of my therapist.
    I haven't had a lick of energy for these four years. I stopped my career, which requires in-person work, when Covid hit, and haven't worked a day since. My adoptive mother died a wretched, traumatic (to me) death of Covid and I cannot unsee what I saw nor unhear what I heard in her efforts to get some amount of breath into her lungs.
    I don't know how to get out of this freeze response, but I think it will require more than just talk therapy and sitting still with my eyes closed. Thank you for sharing about this and I will definitely remember it for when I'm finally healed of all this and my freeze responses may be more temporary in nature.

    • @DrAimieApigian
      @DrAimieApigian  Год назад +1

      Thank you for sharing your story. Many people did not realize what their body is telling them and that it is a coping mechanism to cover up the feelings we don't want to feel. I would love for you to download the free roadmap downloadable in the description of this video if you haven't yet. It is a beginning to safely guiding you towards a clear path of the healing journey.

    • @amytaylor2739
      @amytaylor2739 Год назад

      Yes! I was called lazy too. I remember specifically my father saying to me...I"t's not that you can't do it...its that you just don't want to!" as a way to shame me for my resistance to whatever was being demanded of me. It made me feel so terrible and most likely made my freeze state worse. I now have to deal with similar self-talk when I feel too tired to do something. :(

    • @chrysanthemumfan214
      @chrysanthemumfan214 Год назад

      @@amytaylor2739 I'm so very sorry. I don't think parents should ever call their children by a negative adjective. It's really hurtful and harmful and the label remains with us for life. If Mom had known this, she wouldn't have done it. I know she wouldn't have. She just had this blind spot.
      Really hope you can find your way out of the freeze response. And I hope I can, too.

    • @chrysanthemumfan214
      @chrysanthemumfan214 Год назад

      Thank you very much, Aimie! I shall do exactly that! @@DrAimieApigian

    • @chrysanthemumfan214
      @chrysanthemumfan214 Год назад

      Is it something labeled a "roadmap"? Because what I'm seeing when I click is an invitation to provide you with my email address in exchanged for a document about three biochemical imbalances. Thank you so much! @@DrAimieApigian

  • @StefBarber
    @StefBarber 5 дней назад

    Thank you for this!

  • @Rebecca-Mara
    @Rebecca-Mara 7 месяцев назад

    I appreciate this vulnerable share

  • @magusl9628
    @magusl9628 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for sharing your experience and message of hope. Keep up the good work! 💖

  • @AdamGbl95
    @AdamGbl95 Год назад +1

    This lady is smart! Definitely a blessing. Wow.

  • @NarrelleChain
    @NarrelleChain 9 месяцев назад

    I don't know about freeze but since I acquired a ragdoll cat, I've struggled with exhaustion and have upped my add medication which I then run out of and have to wait days before I can get more, the cat wakes me if I dose off at night and then he screams early in morning 🌄, I used to sleep in a dcslept 10 or 11 hours, now I only get 6 or 7 so I feel like my tiredness is taking over, I have no life anymore, I want to get the ragdoll a new home but I don't know how to do it, then I am conflicted, I have pretty bad trauma, from childhood and now no friends just npd sisters, one who tells me she knows who will take cat but I think she is lieing, not trustworthy! I am no spring chicken either!😢

    • @vidamariaixchel4962
      @vidamariaixchel4962 5 месяцев назад

      Stop complaining. 6/7 hrs of sleep: you’re lucky! I never get more than 4/5 hrs, have been in bed for 4 years now. 71 yrs old, no 🐣 either. Earplugs!

  • @esmethrivingthroughlearning
    @esmethrivingthroughlearning Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for sharing your experience. Now I have a good idea on how I can respond to those moments of overwhelm. I've been learning a lot about the stress response and our window of tolerance which has helped me understand what is happening to me. But your experience is what truly gives me hope for myself. Thank you so much!

  • @TheAbergel
    @TheAbergel Год назад +1

    I relate, you dont hear this too often. Thank you.

    • @DrAimieApigian
      @DrAimieApigian  Год назад

      Thank you! Keep watching the other resources in the channel and hope it helps you more.

  • @katscoffeetalks6428
    @katscoffeetalks6428 Год назад

    Almost two years in bed for me. Idk….I need to learn to walk again #1.

    • @andybreedlove
      @andybreedlove 7 месяцев назад

      18 months here 🫨🙏🏼. Hoping you are doing better?

  • @pamelaparrish7002
    @pamelaparrish7002 Год назад +1

    This helps SO MUCH. Thank you for these insights, this share. So much.💗

    • @DrAimieApigian
      @DrAimieApigian  Год назад

      Glad it was helpful! Continue to watch the other video for additional information!

  • @djkillachris
    @djkillachris 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you

  • @goodgemini9803
    @goodgemini9803 Год назад +1

    Trauma caused this to hurt her. I am so sorry. I wish I could give you all a hug. I love you.

  • @CrystallineSoll
    @CrystallineSoll 11 месяцев назад

    Hi Aimie, I really like your channel, it helps a lot.
    In regards of these responses I have the same experience with the responses of my neuro system. Also such as autistic burn-out or shut down, panic attacks etc.
    I found that method studying various spiritual teachers. And through all my various studies I found that knowledge of "what you resist (or fight agains), that grows stronger". And also advice to never suppress emotions (even strong emotions and emotional responses) trying to "make it better", but rather let it go "through you"... And so I started to apply it some years ago and found out it really works! Exactly as you describe - it just heals quicker, it goes away much faster. Even for the panic attacks :)
    Thank you very much for what you doing! Thanks to you I found out I first need to allow myself to feel safe and supported. Now I am slowly going through more your videos.
    ❤🙏

  • @NC-xl9dw
    @NC-xl9dw Год назад

    Wow I’m having a major “aha” moment! I go into this state when I’m overwhelmed by my people pleasing efforts. It’s absolutely debilitating. I’ve often described it as paralysis. Then I’m extremely depressed and tired for days. I’m now wondering if episodic depression is the freeze response for more than just me! This is very helpful to know that if you allow it, it dissipates. Kind of like emotions when I’m meditating. Thank you!

  • @breindyweisz35
    @breindyweisz35 Год назад

    Before my holiday which is a big one. I was waiting for someone to dot something a while afternoon and they didn't come until the evening to help me with that thing. I was in freeze mode for a few hours until they came. I could not do anything else until they came. Ive been doing dbt for. 2 years. I just couldn't practice any skills the anxiety of not getting the thing done was overwhelming. But once they came I was able to snap out of it.

  • @Grungefan2018
    @Grungefan2018 Год назад +3

    My dad died when I was 6. Then my mother was the the one who told me hundreds of times starting before I can remember "kids are sh^%" "youre nothing " you are nobody " then the entire family made fun of my "sensitive nature " God I was so embarrassed by that. Sad songs and movies would trigger tears and I was just born an empathetic kid. Oh I wished i could will that away . My whole life was an exercise in being embarrassed to be alive. Now at 60 ? The last 8 or so years have been an escalating amount of hell. Dark night if the soul . Unfortunately I chose isolation as a coping mechanism over and over the years, I thought I wasnt hurting anyone and noone was hurting me. Now ? Sh^% I have no social support, no family.. just me and all this ickiness. Not sure how I can undo this programming my mother so diligently engaged in. 😊 I gave up years ago physically and otherwise and now feel so damn weak and cannot seem to engage in life. I've always been a people pleaser and dealing with people has always drained me. Chronic. Migraines, stomach issues etc have just left me depleted .I live in a rural area and work in an extremely toxic environment in a hospital. Oh man I'm rambling here I'm sorry maybe someone can relate.

    • @jau-yonchen6492
      @jau-yonchen6492 Месяц назад

      Appreciate you sharing your story. Keep in mind that you aren't alone and that some folks have had similar experiences & symptoms to differing degrees. Doesn't help that society is unforgiving for us folks who can't SUCCESSFULLY "GET OVER" AND/OR "MANAGE" our trauma, despite a greater awareness of mental health in this day and age :(!

  • @percubit10
    @percubit10 Год назад

    I have major fatigue associated with trauma and anxiety. Life is devastating with events triggered by tragedy and I am in freeze response associated with religious gaslighting

  • @jteichma
    @jteichma 11 месяцев назад

    Thanks for this video Dr. Aimee. This is really helpful and appreciate your sharing your own experience. I can relate to freeze as a default response.

  • @TheNormallyOpen
    @TheNormallyOpen 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you, this has helped me understand something that I could not quite grasp. All the best