Please take a look at Articles on self-defense/conflict/violence for introductions to the references found in the bibliography page.

Please take a look at my bibliography if you do not see a proper reference to a post.

Please take a look at my Notable Quotes

Hey, Attention on Deck!

Hey, NOTHING here is PERSONAL, get over it - Teach Me and I will Learn!


When you begin to feel like you are a tough guy, a warrior, a master of the martial arts or that you have lived a tough life, just take a moment and get some perspective with the following:


I've stopped knives that were coming to disembowel me

I've clawed for my gun while bullets ripped past me

I've dodged as someone tried to put an ax in my skull

I've fought screaming steel and left rubber on the road to avoid death

I've clawed broken glass out of my body after their opening attack failed

I've spit blood and body parts and broke strangle holds before gouging eyes

I've charged into fires, fought through blizzards and run from tornados

I've survived being hunted by gangs, killers and contract killers

The streets were my home, I hunted in the night and was hunted in turn


Please don't brag to me that you're a survivor because someone hit you. And don't tell me how 'tough' you are because of your training. As much as I've been through I know people who have survived much, much worse. - Marc MacYoung

WARNING, CAVEAT AND NOTE

The postings on this blog are my interpretation of readings, studies and experiences therefore errors and omissions are mine and mine alone. The content surrounding the extracts of books, see bibliography on this blog site, are also mine and mine alone therefore errors and omissions are also mine and mine alone and therefore why I highly recommended one read, study, research and fact find the material for clarity. My effort here is self-clarity toward a fuller understanding of the subject matter. See the bibliography for information on the books. Please make note that this article/post is my personal analysis of the subject and the information used was chosen or picked by me. It is not an analysis piece because it lacks complete and comprehensive research, it was not adequately and completely investigated and it is not balanced, i.e., it is my personal view without the views of others including subject experts, etc. Look at this as “Infotainment rather then expert research.” This is an opinion/editorial article/post meant to persuade the reader to think, decide and accept or reject my premise. It is an attempt to cause change or reinforce attitudes, beliefs and values as they apply to martial arts and/or self-defense. It is merely a commentary on the subject in the particular article presented.


Note: I will endevor to provide a bibliography and italicize any direct quotes from the materials I use for this blog. If there are mistakes, errors, and/or omissions, I take full responsibility for them as they are mine and mine alone. If you find any mistakes, errors, and/or omissions please comment and let me know along with the correct information and/or sources.



“What you are reading right now is a blog. It’s written and posted by me, because I want to. I get no financial remuneration for writing it. I don’t have to meet anyone’s criteria in order to post it. Not only I don’t have an employer or publisher, but I’m not even constrained by having to please an audience. If people won’t like it, they won’t read it, but I won’t lose anything by it. Provided I don’t break any laws (libel, incitement to violence, etc.), I can post whatever I want. This means that I can write openly and honestly, however controversial my opinions may be. It also means that I could write total bullshit; there is no quality control. I could be biased. I could be insane. I could be trolling. … not all sources are equivalent, and all sources have their pros and cons. These needs to be taken into account when evaluating information, and all information should be evaluated. - God’s Bastard, Sourcing Sources (this applies to this and other blogs by me as well; if you follow the idea's, advice or information you are on your own, don't come crying to me, it is all on you do do the work to make sure it works for you!)



“You should prepare yourself to dedicate at least five or six years to your training and practice to understand the philosophy and physiokinetics of martial arts and karate so that you can understand the true spirit of everything and dedicate your mind, body and spirit to the discipline of the art.” - cejames (note: you are on your own, make sure you get expert hands-on guidance in all things martial and self-defense)



“All I say is by way of discourse, and nothing by way of advice. I should not speak so boldly if it were my due to be believed.” - Montaigne


I am not a leading authority on any one discipline that I write about and teach, it is my hope and wish that with all the subjects I have studied it provides me an advantage point that I offer in as clear and cohesive writings as possible in introducing the matters in my materials. I hope to serve as one who inspires direction in the practitioner so they can go on to discover greater teachers and professionals that will build on this fundamental foundation. Find the authorities and synthesize a wholehearted and holistic concept, perception and belief that will not drive your practices but rather inspire them to evolve, grow and prosper. My efforts are born of those who are more experienced and knowledgable than I. I hope you find that path! See the bibliography I provide for an initial list of experts, professionals and masters of the subjects.

Belief, Reality-Testing, and the Courage to Be Wrong

Genjitsu kentō [現実検討]: reality-testing


by CEJames (researcher/author) & Akira C. Ichinose (editor/research assistant)

[James-Ichinose]


— Haiku I —


A map drawn in sleep —

the mountain ignores the line

drawn across its chest.

 

— Haiku II —

 

She believed the door locked.

It stood open all winter,

unaware of her faith.

 

CAVEAT: Keikoku (警告)

The content presented in this work is produced solely for educational, research, and creative purposes and does not constitute legal advice, a certified self-defense methodology, or the official position of any organization, institution, or government body.


All views and opinions expressed herein are those of the authors alone. Laws and statutes governing the use of force, personal protection, and related conduct vary by jurisdiction. Readers and practitioners are strongly advised to consult a qualified attorney and to seek instruction from a certified self-defense professional before making any decisions regarding personal protection or the use of force.


Where this work contains fictional narrative, all names, characters, incidents, and dialogue are products of the authors' imagination and are not to be construed as factual, historical, or representative of any real person, living or dead, or any actual event. Any resemblance to real persons or events is entirely coincidental.


All content is protected under applicable copyright law. Unauthorized reproduction, distribution, or transmission of this material, in whole or in part, by any means — electronic, mechanical, photographic, or otherwise — is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of the authors.


Opening: The Map Is Not the Territory

There is a line attributed to the philosopher Alfred Korzybski that has outlived most of the controversies surrounding his work: "The map is not the territory." It is elegant and merciless in equal measure. A belief is a kind of map — a mental model of what is out there, how things work, what to expect. The territory, however, is indifferent. It does not consult your model before arranging itself. It simply is.

 

This distinction — between what we believe to be true and what is actually true — sits at the heart of reality-testing. Reality-testing is the ongoing cognitive and behavioral practice of checking our internal maps against the external world. It is not a single event or a dramatic reckoning. It is a habit, a discipline, and, when done well, a form of epistemic humility that keeps us navigable.

 

The question this essay takes seriously is: what is the relationship between a belief and the response it generates? And what happens when we use those responses — behavioral, emotional, physiological — as feedback loops that either update our maps or entrench them deeper?


A Parable: The Farmer and the Well

An old farmer in a drought-stricken valley believed, with great conviction, that there was no water beneath his eastern field. He had dug twice, found nothing, and the belief became settled fact. He stopped watering the eastern rows. The crops there died.

 

His neighbor, a quiet woman with no strong opinion either way, dug three times in that same eastern corner. On the third attempt she struck water — a clean, cold spring that fed her fields for a decade.

 

The farmer's belief was not frivolous. It was built on experience. But it had calcified into certainty, and certainty, once it stops generating new responses, stops reality-testing entirely. The farmer's behavioral response to his belief — not digging — was also his evidence: no water had been found because he had stopped looking. The belief had swallowed its own feedback loop.

 

This is the first and most insidious danger in the belief-response relationship: a belief that shapes behavior in ways that prevent disconfirming evidence from ever arising.


How Beliefs Generate Responses

Cognitive science has spent the last several decades illuminating what philosophers had long suspected: beliefs are not passive labels we attach to the world. They are active, predictive structures. The predictive processing framework, developed most rigorously by Karl Friston and elaborated by Andy Clark, describes the brain as a prediction machine — a system that generates expectations about incoming sensory data and then updates (or fails to update) based on the gap between prediction and reality (Clark, 2016; Friston, 2010).

 

In this model, a belief is a prior — a probability distribution over what the world is likely to deliver. The belief shapes what we attend to, how we interpret ambiguous information, and what actions we take. The action, in turn, produces new sensory data, which either confirms or challenges the prior. This cycle is known as active inference: we don't just passively receive the world; we act upon it in ways that are shaped by what we already believe, and those actions produce the feedback that either updates or hardens the belief.

 

This is elegant when it works. A skilled physician believes a patient has appendicitis, orders the appropriate test, and either confirms or revises the diagnosis. The belief generated a targeted response; the response generated information; the information updated the belief. This is reality-testing at its functional best.

 

But the system has a flaw: it is conservative. It prefers to minimize prediction error by adjusting perception before it adjusts the belief. We are, in Bayesian terms, more likely to explain away anomalous evidence than to revise a deeply held prior. Daniel Kahneman's work on System 1 and System 2 thinking maps this tendency at the psychological level: fast, automatic thinking (System 1) is deeply belief-confirming, while slow, deliberate reasoning (System 2) is required to genuinely interrogate our priors — and System 2 is expensive, lazy, and frequently hijacked (Kahneman, 2011).


A Second Parable: The Sensei's Kata

A young martial artist had been practicing a particular kata for three years. He believed his technique was correct. His instructor watched him once and said nothing. The student practiced for another year.

 

One day the instructor asked him to demonstrate the kata slowly, then to perform it against a cooperative partner who would simply respond honestly to the technique. When the student executed his inside block, the partner barely felt it. The partner's arm did not deflect. The counter-strike landed.

 

The student's belief — "my technique is correct" — had generated a single response: continued repetition. But repetition without feedback is not practice; it is rehearsal of error. The partner's body was the territory. The student's kata was the map. When the map and the territory were finally brought into contact, the gap became visible.

 

This is why Okinawan karate-jutsu, in its classical forms, places such emphasis on yakusoku kumite and partner work: not to simulate combat, but to reality-test the practitioner's internal model against an external system that does not cooperate with the model's assumptions. The partner's honest resistance is a gift.


The Role of Emotional and Physiological Responses

Beliefs do not generate only behavioral responses. They generate emotional and physiological ones as well. This matters enormously for reality-testing, because emotions are themselves a form of information — but they are information about the state of our internal model, not necessarily about the external world.

 

Antonio Damasio's somatic marker hypothesis suggests that emotional responses are shortcuts: the body's way of flagging situations as familiar, dangerous, rewarding, or alarming based on prior learning (Damasio, 1994). When a belief is activated, the somatic marker associated with it is also activated — producing a felt sense that the belief is true. Fear feels like truth. Conviction feels like evidence. This is why deeply held beliefs are so resistant to rational counter-argument: the argument has to compete not just with a proposition, but with a felt bodily certainty.

 

A soldier who believes that every loud noise signals danger will experience a genuine fear response when a car backfires. The fear is real; the threat is not. The belief-generated response — startle, hypervigilance, cortisol surge — is indistinguishable, at the physiological level, from a response to an actual threat. This is the clinical terrain of hypervigilance and trauma, and it illustrates how powerfully belief shapes the body's reality-testing apparatus itself.


Conversely, a person who believes they are safe in a genuinely dangerous situation will generate a felt sense of calm that suppresses the alarm signals that might prompt reality-testing. Tali Sharot's research on the optimism bias documents this across populations: people systematically underestimate the likelihood of negative events and overestimate their own positive outcomes, and this bias is maintained by selective updating — we revise our beliefs upward in response to good news far more readily than we revise them downward in response to bad (Sharot, 2011).


The Practice of Reality-Testing

Reality-testing, then, is not natural. It runs against the grain of how the predictive brain works. It requires deliberate effort to seek disconfirming evidence, to welcome the uncomfortable gap between map and territory, and to allow behavioral responses to generate genuine feedback rather than just confirming what we already believe.

 

Psychologists have identified several mechanisms that support reality-testing. 


  • Cognitive reappraisal — the deliberate reinterpretation of an event's meaning — allows us to step outside the automatic emotional response and examine what the evidence actually says (Gross, 2002). 
  • Perspective-taking, the imaginative exercise of seeing a situation from another's vantage point, disrupts the echo chamber of self-referential belief. 
  • And metacognition — thinking about thinking — creates the observer's distance necessary to notice when a belief is generating responses that prevent rather than enable accurate perception.


In contemplative traditions, this observer function is cultivated through practices of stillness and attention. In the Zen tradition, the koan is precisely a device for breaking the habitual prediction: the question has no answer that the existing map can produce, and the disorientation that results creates the opening through which a more accurate perception might arrive. In the Okinawan budo tradition, the concept of mushin — no-mind, or mind without fixed attachment — points in the same direction: the practitioner who is not attached to their expectation of what the opponent will do is more capable of seeing what the opponent is actually doing.

 

This is reality-testing as a martial and philosophical practice: the willingness to let the territory correct the map, even when the map feels certain.


A Third Parable: The Navigator's Stars

A navigator crossing a long stretch of open ocean had fixed his position by the stars on the first night out. He was confident. He had navigated this route before.

 

On the third day, a crew member noticed that the islands they expected to pass on the port side had not appeared. The navigator consulted his chart. The chart was correct. He had calculated correctly. And yet the islands were not there.

 

There were two possible explanations: the islands had moved, or his original star-fix had been slightly in error — small enough that it seemed negligible, but sufficient, over three days of sailing, to place him miles from where he believed he was.

 

He chose to believe the islands had not yet appeared. He sailed on. He was wrong by forty miles before he finally took a new sighting and corrected his course.

 

The original belief — "I know my position" — had generated a response pattern that systematically rejected disconfirming information. The missing islands were the territory's correction. The navigator's certainty was the map's resistance. It cost him two days.

 

Reality-testing would have required him, on the third day, to say: "Given that the evidence does not match the prediction, the prediction may be wrong." This is not a comfortable sentence for anyone who has navigated confidently for years. It requires a form of epistemic courage — the courage to privilege external evidence over internal certainty.


When Responses Become Evidence

There is a particularly interesting and treacherous dynamic in which the responses generated by a belief are mistakenly taken as evidence for that belief. This is the mechanism behind many self-fulfilling prophecies, and it is worth examining carefully.

 

A person who believes they are socially unwanted will often, in social situations, generate responses — withdrawal, flat affect, guarded body language — that produce exactly the social reception they fear. Others respond to the guarded presentation with reduced warmth, which the believer then registers as confirmation: "I knew they didn't want me here." The belief generated a behavioral response that shaped the environment to match the belief. The belief was, in a narrow sense, "confirmed" — but only because it had engineered the confirmation.

 

Robert Rosenthal and Lenore Jacobson's foundational research on the Pygmalion effect documented this at the institutional level: teachers who believed certain students were intellectually gifted generated responses — more encouragement, more challenging material, more positive feedback — that produced measurable gains in those students' performance. The belief shaped the teacher's behavior; the behavior shaped the outcome; the outcome appeared to confirm the belief (Rosenthal & Jacobson, 1968).

 

The lesson is not that beliefs always create their own confirmation — the world pushes back too hard for that to be universally true. But it is a caution against treating the outcomes of our belief-driven behavior as clean evidence about external reality. The evidence was, at least in part, manufactured by the belief itself.


Counter-Argument: In Defense of Belief's Resistance

A fair-minded examination of this subject requires acknowledging a real objection: perhaps the relationship between belief and reality-testing is not as simple as "test and update." Perhaps some degree of belief-resistance is not a flaw but a feature.

 

The philosopher Charles Sanders Peirce, in his foundational work on inquiry, argued that doubt — genuine doubt, not performed doubt — must precede genuine inquiry. A belief that collapses at the first breath of counter-evidence is not a belief; it is a placeholder. Sustained inquiry requires a working hypothesis that is held firmly enough to guide action and generate falsifiable predictions. If we revised every belief the moment a single piece of anomalous evidence appeared, we would never arrive at robust knowledge — we would simply spin in place, updating endlessly on noise (Peirce, 1877).

 

Nassim Nicholas Taleb makes a related but sharper point in his work on fragility and robustness: the willingness to be corrected is not always a virtue. Sometimes the environment itself is unreliable, the feedback noisy, and the initial belief represents a kind of hard-won wisdom that should not be surrendered cheaply (Taleb, 2012). A seasoned clinician who trusts a diagnosis despite an anomalous test result may be reasoning well, not poorly, if they have strong prior evidence that the test is unreliable.

 

We take this counter-argument seriously. Reality-testing is not the same as credulity toward counter-evidence. It is not the reflexive abandonment of a belief at every challenge. It is something more disciplined: the systematic practice of asking, "What would disconfirm this? Have I encountered that? If so, does my explanation for why it doesn't count hold up?" The distinction between principled belief-maintenance and motivated resistance is subtle, but it is the most important distinction in this entire domain. We admit we do not always have a clean way to draw that line, and we suspect nobody does.


Conclusion: The Discipline of the Open Map

The relationship between belief and reality-testing is not adversarial. Beliefs are necessary. They are the cognitive infrastructure through which experience becomes navigable. Without them, each moment would be overwhelming — the brain cannot process raw sensation without models to make sense of it.

 

But a belief held without any reality-testing mechanism becomes a closed system. It generates responses that confirm itself, interprets evidence through its own lens, and eventually loses contact with the territory it was meant to describe. The map begins to replace the landscape.

 

The practice of reality-testing is the discipline of keeping the map open — penciled in rather than carved in stone. It requires behavioral responses that generate genuine feedback: the martial artist who tests technique against a resistant partner, the navigator who takes a new star-sighting when the evidence doesn't match, the scientist who designs experiments intended to fail, the ordinary person who asks, with sincere curiosity, "Am I reading this situation correctly, or am I reading my own fear?"

 

None of this is easy. It runs against the grain of the prediction-conserving brain, the somatic certainty of emotionally held conviction, and the quiet comfort of a map that has served us before. But it is, in the end, the discipline that separates a living mind from one that has simply stopped moving.


References

Clark, A. (2016). Surfing uncertainty: Prediction, action, and the embodied mind. Oxford University Press.

Damasio, A. R. (1994). Descartes' error: Emotion, reason, and the human brain. Putnam.

Friston, K. (2010). The free-energy principle: A unified brain theory? Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 11(2), 127–138. https://doi.org/10.1038/nrn2787

Gross, J. J. (2002). Emotion regulation: Affective, cognitive, and social consequences. Psychophysiology, 39(3), 281–291. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0048577201393198

Kahneman, D. (2011). Thinking, fast and slow. Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

Korzybski, A. (1933). Science and sanity: An introduction to non-Aristotelian systems and general semantics. Institute of General Semantics.

Peirce, C. S. (1877). The fixation of belief. Popular Science Monthly, 12, 1–15.

Rosenthal, R., & Jacobson, L. (1968). Pygmalion in the classroom: Teacher expectation and pupils' intellectual development. Holt, Rinehart and Winston.

Sharot, T. (2011). The optimism bias: A tour of the irrationally positive brain. Pantheon Books.

Taleb, N. N. (2012). Antifragile: Things that gain from disorder. Random House.

 

© 2025 James-Ichinose. All rights reserved

Stone Still

The Freeze Response, Tonic Immobility, and the Survival Mind

 

Stone silence descends—

the body forgets its name,

winter holds all still.

 

No thought, only ice—

ancient wiring takes command,

breath waits in the dark.

 

by CEJames (researcher/author) & Akira Ichinose (editor/research assistant)

 

Keikoku / 警告

The content presented in this work is produced solely for educational, research, and creative purposes and does not constitute legal advice, a certified self-defense methodology, or the official position of any organization, institution, or government body.

 

All views and opinions expressed herein are those of the authors alone. Laws and statutes governing the use of force, personal protection, and related conduct vary by jurisdiction; readers and practitioners are strongly advised to consult a qualified attorney and to seek instruction from a certified self-defense professional before making any decisions regarding personal protection or the use of force.

 

Where this work contains fictional narrative, all names, characters, incidents, and dialogue are products of the authors’ imagination and are not to be construed as factual, historical, or representative of any real person, living or dead, or any actual event. Any resemblance to real persons or events is entirely coincidental.

 

All content is protected under applicable copyright law. Unauthorized reproduction, distribution, or transmission of this material, in whole or in part, by any means — electronic, mechanical, photographic, or otherwise — is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of the authors.


I. The Body Knows Before You Do

Most of us have heard of the fight-or-flight response. It’s practically a household phrase at this point—a tidy shorthand for the surge of adrenaline, the spike in heart rate, the narrowing of focus that the body uses to prepare for action. We learn it in high school biology, we invoke it in conversation, and in the self-defense world it forms the bedrock of almost every stress-inoculation framework ever devised.


But there is a third response—older, deeper, and far less talked about. It doesn’t run and it doesn’t fight. It simply stops.


The freeze response, in its extreme form called tonic immobility, is a well-documented mammalian survival mechanism capable of overriding conscious intention under conditions of extreme stress. It is not cowardice. It is not weakness. It is not failure. It is the nervous system executing a program written hundreds of millions of years before the human prefrontal cortex existed to second-guess it.


Understanding freeze isn’t just academically interesting. For anyone involved in personal protection, law enforcement, trauma therapy, or martial arts training, it may be one of the most practically important topics there is—and one of the most persistently misunderstood.


II. What the Brain Is Actually Doing

The Autonomic Nervous System and Its Three Modes

To understand freeze, we need a brief detour into the architecture of the autonomic nervous system (ANS)—the part of the nervous system that operates largely below conscious awareness, regulating heartbeat, respiration, digestion, and threat response.


The classic model describes two branches: the sympathetic nervous system (SNS), which activates in response to threat (“fight or flight”), and the parasympathetic nervous system (PNS), which governs rest and recovery. Stephen Porges’ Polyvagal Theory, first proposed in 1994 and refined in subsequent decades, adds important nuance by identifying a third pathway: the dorsal vagal complex (DVC), an evolutionarily ancient component of the vagus nerve that mediates the most extreme form of shutdown—freeze, collapse, and tonic immobility (Porges, 2011).


According to Porges, the nervous system responds to perceived threat in a hierarchical, sequenced fashion. The first response is social engagement: the person attempts to resolve the threat through communication, negotiation, or appeal to others. If that fails, the sympathetic system mobilizes—fight or flight. If both of those fail, or if the threat is perceived as catastrophically overwhelming and inescapable, the dorsal vagal system takes over. The body drops into conservation mode. Movement ceases. Heart rate plummets. Breathing becomes shallow. The person becomes, in effect, stone still.


Tonic Immobility: The Final Override

Tonic immobility (TI) is the most extreme expression of the freeze response. It is characterized by muscular rigidity or limpness (depending on the context), significantly reduced responsiveness to stimuli, suppressed vocalization, and a subjective experience that survivors often describe as dissociation, paralysis, or the sensation of watching themselves from outside their own body (Galliano et al., 1993; Fuse et al., 1996).


The term itself comes from comparative ethology—the study of animal behavior. A rabbit caught by a fox, a mouse gripped by a hawk, a shark flipped upside down by a researcher: all exhibit tonic immobility. In prey species, TI appears to serve several adaptive functions. A motionless prey animal may lose the predator’s interest, since many predators are triggered by movement. The analgesia associated with TI—an endorphin-driven suppression of pain—may allow the animal to endure what cannot be escaped. And in some cases, the sudden release from TI can startle a predator long enough for escape (Gallup & Rager, 1996).


In human beings, the same ancient circuitry remains. Tonic immobility has been documented in survivors of sexual assault (Bovin et al., 2008; Heidt et al., 2005), combat veterans, accident victims, and individuals subjected to overwhelming threat. It is not a rare anomaly. Research by Moller and colleagues (2017) found that approximately 70 percent of a sample of 298 rape victims reported moderate-to-severe tonic immobility during the assault, and 48 percent reported significant immobility.

 

III. A Parable — The Night the Dojo Went Quiet

Marcus had trained for six years. Not casually—seriously. He had calluses from the heavy bag, muscle memory for his kata, and the quiet confidence of someone who had been stress-tested under controlled conditions more times than he could count. He was not, by any measure, unprepared.


The parking lot behind the gym was poorly lit. He noticed the man a second too late—too close, moving too fast, the blade catching what little light there was as it cleared the man’s waistband.


Marcus did nothing. That is the only word for it. He did not step back. He did not draw his hands up. He did not shout. He stood, and the world around him seemed to slow and thicken, as if the air had turned to amber. He was aware, dimly and with a strange calm, that he was in danger. He simply could not make his body respond.


The attacker hesitated—long enough for a passing car’s headlights to sweep the lot. He ran. Marcus stood in the amber for another several seconds before his legs began to shake, his breath returned in a gasp, and he found himself sitting on the asphalt without knowing how he’d gotten there.


Later, in the after-action accounting that every practitioner of his experience inevitably conducts, Marcus would replay the moment endlessly: Why didn’t I move? He had a thousand hours of training. His hands knew what to do. And yet nothing had come.


The answer—the answer Marcus eventually found in the research literature—was not that his training had failed. It was that his nervous system had made a decision that his conscious mind had no vote in. The threat had been perceived as catastrophically close, overwhelmingly lethal, and inescapable in the half-second before rational assessment could even begin. The dorsal vagal brake had slammed on. Marcus’s body had frozen before Marcus could decide whether to freeze or not.


The training, as it turned out, had kept him alive in a different way: his stillness was total, and the attacker—expecting struggle or flight—had paused, unsure what he was dealing with. The freeze that Marcus experienced as failure had, in the mathematics of that particular moment, functioned as something closer to camouflage.


IV. The Neurobiology of the Frozen Moment

Periaqueductal Gray and the Defense Cascade

When researchers attempt to locate the freeze response neuroanatomically, one structure keeps appearing: the periaqueductal gray (PAG), a region of the midbrain that acts as a command center for defensive behavior. Neuroscientist Jaak Panksepp described the PAG as a critical mediator of the FEAR system—one of the primary emotional operating systems of mammalian brains (Panksepp, 1998).


The PAG organizes behavior along a threat-proximity gradient. When threat is distant and escapable, it generates the active fear responses: vigilance, alarm, mobilization. As threat becomes closer and less escapable, the PAG shifts toward passive fear responses: crouching, inhibition of movement, reduced vocalization. At the extreme end—when threat is perceived as immediate, inescapable, and lethal—the PAG appears to trigger the frozen, analgesic state of tonic immobility (Bracha, 2004; Kozlowska et al., 2015).


This is not a decision. It is a reflex. The cascade unfolds in milliseconds, driven by subcortical threat-appraisal circuits that operate far faster than the deliberate, language-based cognition we associate with “thinking.” By the time the prefrontal cortex has assembled enough information to form a plan, the body may already be frozen.


Cortisol, Dissociation, and Time Distortion

One of the most disorienting aspects of tonic immobility—reported consistently across survivor accounts—is the alteration of subjective time and self-awareness. Survivors describe watching events unfold “from the ceiling,” losing track of time, or feeling that they were not entirely present in their own body. This dissociative quality is not imagination. It reflects the neurobiology of extreme stress.


Under conditions of overwhelming threat, the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis drives a massive release of cortisol and other stress hormones. Simultaneously, endogenous opioid systems—the brain’s own morphine-like compounds—are activated, producing analgesia and emotional blunting. The prefrontal cortex, which normally integrates experience into coherent narrative, is partially suppressed. The result is a fragmented, time-dilated, pain-reduced state that can be extremely difficult to recall with precision afterward—which has significant implications for trauma survivors attempting to give testimony or make sense of what happened to them (van der Kolk, 2014).

 

V. A Parable — The Testimony

Elena was a precise woman—a technical writer by profession, someone whose working life was organized around accuracy and sequential logic. She had always trusted her memory. When the night of the attack came, she was certain that she would remember everything clearly.


She remembered almost nothing clearly.

She remembered the kitchen counter—the specific tile pattern, which she had never consciously noticed before—in extraordinary detail. She remembered a sound like a radio playing somewhere distant, though she could not later identify where it might have come from. She did not remember the duration of the assault. She did not remember many of its specific events. She remembered, with horrible clarity, a coffee cup on the counter and could not tell you what else had been in the room.


At the hospital, a nurse named Rosa sat with her and did something that would matter more than Rosa could have known: she told her that what Elena’s memory had done was not a failure of character or of intelligence. It was what brains do under conditions of terror. The hippocampus, which normally encodes memory into coherent sequences, is one of the regions most disrupted by acute traumatic stress. Fragmented, sensory-soaked, non-linear recall is not a sign that something didn’t happen. It is a sign that the brain was overwhelmed when it did.


Elena later said that Rosa’s explanation was the first thing that allowed her to stop blaming herself for not fighting, for not screaming, for not moving. She had frozen. Her brain had not betrayed her. It had executed a survival program so old it predated language itself.

 

VI. What This Means for the Self-Defense Practitioner

The Gap Between Training and Application

The practical implications of the freeze response are significant for anyone who trains in martial arts or self-defense. Most traditional training assumes access to a functional motor system—that when the time comes, the practitioner will be able to execute the techniques they have drilled. The freeze response demonstrates that this assumption is not guaranteed.


Researchers in high-stakes performance psychology have documented what is sometimes called the “gap problem”: the distance between what a person can do in a controlled training environment and what they actually do in an uncontrolled, high-stakes event. The freeze response is one of the most dramatic expressions of this gap. A practitioner may have ten thousand repetitions of a wrist release—and still be unable to execute it if the nervous system has dropped into dorsal vagal shutdown before the conscious decision to act can form (Grossman & Christensen, 2008).


Stress Inoculation and Pattern Interruption

The most robust evidence-based approach to reducing freeze vulnerability is stress inoculation training—controlled, progressive exposure to threat-analogous stimuli in a training environment, with the explicit goal of moving the threat-response threshold. By repeatedly activating the stress response at manageable levels and then executing trained behaviors through it, practitioners may be able to “sell” the nervous system a new pattern: threat → activation → action, rather than threat → overwhelm → shutdown (Siddle, 1995).


This is the theoretical basis for force-on-force training, scenario-based drills, adrenal stress conditioning, and related methodologies. The goal is not to eliminate the stress response—that is both impossible and undesirable, since stress hormones sharpen sensory acuity and fuel explosive movement—but to train through it often enough that activation no longer triggers shutdown.


Simple pattern-interrupt cues—physical anchors like a forceful exhale, a stomp of the foot, or a shouted word—can sometimes serve as circuit breakers that shift the nervous system from the dorsal vagal freeze back toward sympathetic mobilization. These techniques are simple enough to survive in the primitive, degraded cognitive environment of extreme stress, which is precisely why practitioners are advised to keep them simple (Grossman & Christensen, 2008).

 

VII. A Counterpoint — Challenging the Narrative (Perspective-Taking and Intellectual Humility)

At this point it seems only right to slow down and engage honestly with the strongest objections to the framework we’ve been building. The authors hold these ideas with conviction, but conviction is not the same thing as certainty, and responsible scholarship requires sitting with the challenges rather than paper-over them.


Objection 1: Is “Tonic Immobility” Being Overextended?

The most substantive scientific objection comes from researchers who argue that the term tonic immobility—originally derived from studies of prey animals—is being applied too broadly to human stress responses that may have different underlying mechanisms (Hagenaars, 2016). A rabbit in a hawk’s grip and a human being in a threatening parking lot are not necessarily experiencing the same neurobiological state. The behavioral similarity does not guarantee mechanistic equivalence.


This is a fair point. The cross-species translation of behavioral constructs is always fraught with interpretive risk. Much of the human TI research relies on self-report measures developed post-hoc—that is, people are asked, after the fact, to describe their experience during a traumatic event. Memory for traumatic events is known to be unreliable and reconstructive. It is possible that some proportion of what gets coded as “tonic immobility” on these scales reflects confabulation, retrospective reframing, or the influence of the question’s framing itself.


We should be honest: the neuroscience of human freeze response is a developing field, not a settled one. Porges’ Polyvagal Theory, while enormously influential and intuitively compelling, has its critics in the empirical literature (Grossman, 2023). The precise role of the dorsal vagal complex in human freeze versus other threat responses is still being worked out. Intellectual honesty requires acknowledging that popular science writing—including, potentially, this document—sometimes presents a tidier picture than the actual research warrants.


Objection 2: Does “Survival Mechanism” Framing Risk Passive Fatalism?

A different objection—one more likely to come from the self-defense community than the laboratory—concerns the implications of the survival-mechanism framing. If we teach people that freeze is an ancient hardwired response that can override conscious intention, do we risk inadvertently encouraging a kind of passive fatalism? “I can’t help it—it’s just my nervous system.”


This is not a trivial concern. The same research tradition that has been so effective in destigmatizing freeze among trauma survivors can, if carelessly extrapolated, be used to rationalize inadequate preparation or to discourage the hard work of stress inoculation training. “Freezing is natural” is not the same as “freezing is inevitable and unaddressable.”


The evidence suggests that training does matter—that the threshold at which the nervous system shifts from mobilization to shutdown is not fixed, and that it can be raised through deliberate, adversity-grounded preparation. The risk of over-extending the “it’s hardwired” narrative is that it may discourage people from doing that preparation, or provide a post-hoc justification for not having done it. A nuanced treatment of the subject—which we have tried to offer here—must insist on both truths simultaneously: freeze is real, it is physiological, and it is not a character failure; and freeze response thresholds can be modified by training, and that training is worth doing.


What the Authors Concede

We concede that some of the popular-science framing of Polyvagal Theory has outrun the empirical evidence. We concede that cross-species behavioral translation has limits. We concede that there is a real risk of fatalism if the survival-mechanism framing is misapplied. And we insist, in spite of these concessions, that the core finding—that extreme threat can produce involuntary motor inhibition that overrides conscious intention—is robust, well-replicated, and clinically important. The implications for how we train, how we assess trauma survivors, and how we think about the gap between preparation and performance remain valid regardless of how the finer-grained mechanistic questions are eventually resolved.


VIII. Freeze, Trauma, and the Path Forward

The Post-Freeze Accounting

One of the cruelest aspects of tonic immobility—from a psychological standpoint—is what tends to happen after it. The person who froze frequently engages in a brutal internal cross-examination: Why didn’t I fight? Why didn’t I run? Why didn’t I scream? The answers they construct are almost invariably self-condemning: I was a coward. I wanted it. I chose this.


These conclusions are not only factually wrong in the neuroscientific sense—they are actively harmful. Research has consistently demonstrated that post-assault self-blame correlates strongly with worse psychological outcomes, including higher rates of PTSD, depression, and impaired recovery (Frazier, 2003). The misattribution of a physiological event to a moral failure is not merely inaccurate; it is damaging.


This is why psychoeducation about the freeze response—delivered in the right context, at the right time—can be genuinely therapeutic. Simply knowing that what the body did was not a choice, that it was the execution of an ancient survival program, can be enough to interrupt the self-blame spiral and begin the process of accurate accounting (Levine, 2010).


Somatic Approaches to Resolution

Peter Levine’s Somatic Experiencing model proposes that trauma becomes “stuck” in the nervous system when the natural completion of a defensive response is interrupted—as it frequently is during tonic immobility (Levine, 2010). The body mobilized for defense; the defense was unable to execute; the mobilization energy has nowhere to go. In Levine’s model, the path to resolution involves gently, titrated reengagement with the physical sensations associated with the incomplete defense—allowing the body to complete, symbolically and somatically, what it could not complete at the time.


This is not a substitute for professional trauma treatment, and the authors want to be clear on that point. But understanding the somatic dimension of freeze—the way it lives in the body and not merely in the mind—is increasingly recognized as important by trauma-informed clinicians across multiple therapeutic modalities.

 

IX. A Martial Arts Lens — Mushin, Zanshin, and the Paradox of Stillness

There is an interesting intersection between the neuroscience of tonic immobility and certain concepts native to the Okinawan and Japanese martial arts traditions. The concept of mushin—“no-mind” or mind without fixed thought—describes a state of radical present-moment responsiveness in which deliberate cognition gives way to reflexive, trained movement. It is explicitly the absence of the kind of conscious deliberation that, under extreme stress, may be unavailable anyway.


The paradox for the serious practitioner is this: the freeze response and mushin occupy, in a sense, the same territory—the territory of action without deliberation. In mushin, the practitioner moves without having to decide to move; in tonic immobility, the practitioner is stopped without having decided to stop. Both bypass the conscious executive. The difference lies in what the nervous system has been conditioned to execute.


This is not a mystical observation. It has a direct training implication. The goal of high-level martial arts practice—drilling responses to the point of automaticity, removing the deliberative gap between stimulus and response—is precisely the kind of nervous-system conditioning that can compete with the freeze response at the subcortical level. Not by eliminating the dorsal vagal pathway, but by giving the nervous system a counter-conditioning that activates faster than the freeze cascade can complete.


Zanshin—“remaining mind,” the sustained, relaxed alertness that lingers after technique—is another relevant concept. The practitioner trained in zanshin maintains a quality of soft, open attention that is neither hyper-vigilant (which is exhausting and cognitively expensive) nor disengaged (which is dangerous). This middle-ground state appears to correspond reasonably well to what psychophysiologists call moderate sympathetic arousalthe zone in which threat processing is rapid and efficient without triggering the cascade into shutdown.

 

X. Practical Takeaways

For the practitioner, the researcher, the clinician, or the person simply trying to understand what happened to them, the freeze response carries several practical implications worth making explicit.


First: freeze is not a failure of character. It is a physiological event with identifiable neuroanatomical substrates. If you have ever frozen under extreme threat—in training or in life—that response does not make you a coward. It makes you a mammal with an intact brainstem.


Second: freeze thresholds are not fixed. The point at which the nervous system tips from mobilization into shutdown varies with prior conditioning, perceived controllability, prior trauma history, and training. None of these factors is permanent.


Third: the most effective training for freeze mitigation is adversity-grounded and physiologically activating. Drilling kata in a quiet dojo is valuable for many purposes; it is not, by itself, reliable preparation for the moment of extreme threat. Controlled exposure to elevated stress, with the requirement to execute trained behavior through the discomfort, is the most direct available pathway to raising the freeze threshold.


Fourth: for trauma survivors, understanding the freeze response can be a first step toward accurate, compassionate accounting of what happened. If a survivor’s therapist or advocate does not already have this information, it may be worth putting it in front of them.


Fifth: intellectual humility is warranted. The science is real and the practical implications are significant, but the mechanistic story is still being written. Approach this material—including this document—as a working framework rather than a final word.

 

XI. Conclusion — Stone Still and Still Alive

Marcus, sitting on the asphalt with his legs shaking, eventually understood something that would reshape how he trained. 


Elena, who had blamed herself for two years before a single conversation with a trauma-informed counselor began to shift the accounting, eventually found language for what had happened to her body. 


Both of them arrived, through different roads, at the same basic truth.


The body is not inert machinery waiting for the mind to issue commands. It is an ancient, layered system with its own priorities, its own threat-appraisal circuits, and its own protocols—protocols that were calibrated for survival in an environment far more dangerous than the one most of us now inhabit, and that do not pause to consult us before executing.


The freeze response—tonic immobility at its extreme, momentary hesitation at its mildest—is one of those protocols. It evolved because, under certain conditions, stillness was the best available survival strategy. It persists because evolution is conservative: it does not discard what has worked, even when the context changes.


Our task, as practitioners and as human beings, is not to pretend the freeze response does not exist, nor to condemn it, nor to build a mythology in which the properly trained warrior is immune to it. Our task is to understand it with clarity, prepare for it with intelligence, and respond to its aftermath—in ourselves and in others—with the kind of accurate, compassionate accounting that the evidence demands.


Stone still. And, if the preparation was good enough, still alive.


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