Intergenerational Trauma and the Stress Response: Fight, Flight, and Freeze

How the fight-flight-freeze response relates to Intergenerational Trauma — understanding your nervous system's survival mode.

The fight-flight-freeze stress response is the biological foundation of many intergenerational trauma presentations. Understanding it demystifies intergenerational trauma and points toward effective interventions.

The Three Stress Responses in Intergenerational Trauma

Fight: Anger, aggression, irritability — intergenerational trauma channeled outward

Flight: Avoidance, escape, withdrawal — the most common intergenerational trauma behavioral pattern

Freeze: Paralysis, numbness, shutdown — depression and dissociation-type intergenerational trauma

How Chronic Activation Drives Intergenerational Trauma

When the stress response activates repeatedly or doesn't turn off, it creates the chronic physiological state underlying intergenerational trauma: elevated cortisol, dysregulated neurotransmitters, disrupted sleep.

Working With Your Stress Response in Intergenerational Trauma

  • Name it: 'My nervous system is in fight/flight/freeze right now'
  • Move: Physical movement discharges the mobilization energy of fight/flight
  • Breathe: Activates the off-switch for the stress response
  • Connect: Safe social engagement signals to the nervous system that the threat has passed

Related Resources

Bringwise

Turn psychology into daily habits

5 minutes a day. Science-backed insights you can actually use.

Download Free