Hi everyone and welcome to my letter C post in the #AtoZChallenge. Last year during this challenge, I discussed codependency for my letter C post. Today, I want to talk about the same topic, but specifically as it relates to people who experienced complex trauma.
You are probably familiar with the fight or flight response when it comes to fear. However, there are several other ways people can respond to perceived threats. One of them is fawning. This has always been a confusing term for me, particularly because I’m a non-native speaker of English and there is no proper translation of this word in Dutch as far as I’m aware.
Fawning, if I’m correct, in the context of trauma means being overly compliant with the wishes of other people and being unable to protest. It’s similar to people-pleasing, for which I haven’t found a proper Dutch translation either by the way.
Pete Walker, the author through whom I know of the fawn-based trauma response, has an entire chapter on this topic in his book on complex PTSD. I just opened the book to the chapter on fawning and oh my did it hit hard! Walker starts out by explaining how he learned that he himself gravitates towards a fawn response when he apologized to a chair for bumping into it. I have done that too.
However, it’s harder for me when I find myself apologizing to people, because too often my apology gets seen as being insincere when I truly have a reason to apologize. That makes sense, especially because I can also show a fight-based response when triggered.
The thing for me is that I overadapt until I can no longer take it anymore and then I have an aggressive meltdown. This sometimes makes me doubt I actually fawn at all. It doesn’t help that my parents from a young age on ingrained the thought that I am selfish into my psyche. I can indeed be self-centered, but that’s not the same.
I am still unsure whether I am a primarily fawning trauma survivor rather than a fight type. However, reading Walker’s chapter makes me realize I’m probably closer to the fawn end of the fight-fawn continuum than many people, including myself, believe. I, after all, experience a deep-seated lack of understanding and even deeper lack of appreciation of myself. Walker calls this self-abandonment and self-abnegation. I wonder whether, because my most outwardly noticeable reaction when triggered is fight, I have been conditioned to see myself as primarily a fight-based type.
an interesting post Astrid, I had not read pete’s book, but now, I want to read it! This is something that I do too!
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Thanks for commenting. I have had the book on my Kindle for years but never fully read it either.
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I have noticed that the people most likely to accuse someone of being selfish are the most selfish individuals alive. And usually it’s more of a projection. They claim someone is being selfish when they’re not to cover for the fact that they’re the ones being selfish. I’m sorry about your parents. They sound like horrors.
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Thanks a lot for your kind comment. I do understand where my parents’ idea that I’m selfish came from, ie. the fact that they believe I got more than my sister (in terms of attention, help, etc.). Guess what? Neither of us got enough positive attention.
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I was aware of fight or flight response. Got to know about fawning. Got me thinking.
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Yeah, until I read Pete Walker’s book, I too only knew about fight and flight. Thanks for commenting.
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