Panic Poetry In Prose

Panic in prose
It starts off as a steely resolve to be…steel.

I will not be moved. I will not be moved.
I will fix my mind and not be blind to what is really going on

A cascade of chemical effects begin to disburse thru my nervous system.

Is this a joke? I know what’s happening. Why can’t I make it stop?

In this self-aware nightmare my chest tightens like a snare
From a deconditioned position I spring to my feet like my legs are hydraulics

I pace to my own heart’s race
Wishing I could bawl I suppress my caterwaul

Banging my body into the walls like a pinball
Clawing at my arms and legs the back of my throat filled with gall

Breathless I stand writing rhymes to heal
I wait for my beta blocker to kick in to stem the reel
I’ve never known a more brutal and dehumanizing countdown
Shaking under the pressure I long to sit down

Since 2017 it’s been one crisis after another
And then this year I lost my mother
The pain in the voice of my grandmother when she found her dead
Has shattered me
I’m really not certain there’ll be a recovery

I try so hard to press on and do the normal things
But from sunrise to sunset I never know what the next cycle brings

I do know that crying feels so very good
But, sometimes I can’t cry no matter how hard I try

I wish I could cry instead of panic
Let the tears wash my pain instead of feeling frantic

Yoga, meditation, breathwork, and good friends
my cat, my keyboard, and my cousin’s pens
I gather these things around me trying to make a nest
To save my soul from the beating in my chest

I sometimes wonder if I’ll make it out alive
Even with my willingness & efforts will I ever get truly free to thrive

Shoes dropping all over the place
Forced from one precipice to another
Surely there is some unseen demonic bullwhip cracking at my back
It’s 2 am and I am a penned insomniac

Why I Became A Travel Agent: My Spiritual Awakening Account In Istanbul Airport

THIS. This is why being a travel agent is so important and meaningful for me.

Travel literally changed my life’s trajectory in ONE trip. I left #chattanooga, #tennessee and when I landed in #istanbul#turkiye…I had a massive, highly visible spiritual awakening in the MIDDLE of Istanbul airport.

I left Chattanooga as a woman who has had over a 20 year struggle with panic disorder and when I got inside of Istanbul airport, on my way to #antalya, Turkiye….I missed my flight.

Now, if you suffer from mental health issues you likely understand how a missed flight is a huge trigger in and of itself. But, let me show you the implications of this missed flight for me and the profound change that took place in me that upgraded my life for the better.

#1. I didn’t speak Turkish and the English on the airport signs wasn’t quite clear. For example, in the restrooms there were signs about conserving trees by using electric hand dryers at the sinks. They encouraged us to limit our paper use saying, “it isn’t good for the nature.” So, it was English but it took some piecing together to fully grasp the message being conveyed. And, when you are overcome with panic your brain is fogged up from adrenaline.

#2. The airport is massive. Larger than the #atlanta#hartsfieldjackson airport. And, I’m overweight and have short legs. So getting through the airport meant I had to move super fast. But, I had no idea where the gates were because I couldn’t understand the signage. So not only was my heart rate rocketing from being in panic but from moving as quickly as I could with a heavy duffle bag that had no wheels, a CPAP machine across my shoulder, a back pack, and a fanny pack. So, here was another trigger.

#3. I had used EVERY PENNY to my name to pay for this trip. I literally had $200.00 in my bank account to last me for 10 days in Turkey. I was at an all-inclusive resort Miracle Resort Hotel so meals were included thankfully. But, can you imagine being a single woman, with panic disorder, in a foreign country where you can’t undesrtand people and they can’t understand you and you are ALONE. I was over 8,000 miles away and dialing 911 or calling a friend or family member to help me wasn’t an option.

#4. The EVIL EYE 🧿– Turkish people believe it is bad luck to show distress. They believe it only attracts more problems. I had NO idea about this. I was walking back and forth through this massive airport, crying my eyes out and asking airport employees and strangers for help. ALL of them ran from me like I had leprosy! I thought, “what is with these people?? Why won’t they talk to me?? What about customer service??” Customer service agents were dismissing me because they didn’t want any part of my panicked energy. Here’s another trigger!

#5. One missed flight change can easily cost $200.00 or MORE and that was all the money I had. No credit cards, nothing. My ticket change cost $180.00. So I had $20.00 in case of an emergency for the next 10 days. Trigger!

#6. Depending on when I could catch another flight I wondered how long it would be and if I would have to spend the night in the airport. I had my CPAP machine on me but had left my power convertors in my luggage and again, I didn’t have enough money to buy one at the airport. I have severe central and obstructive sleep apnea. I had already gone 36 hours with NO sleep and was facing possibly not sleeping in the airport because I couldn’t use my CPAP machine. Trigger!!

#7. Shady airport employee- Finally, an airport employee had had enough of me asking him for help and walking from one end of the airport to the other crying. He came up to me and in a stern voice said, “FOLLOW ME.” I was relieved!! But, that relief was going to be temporary! He took me into some hallways where there were no people, led me back and forth through the airport, and I am certain because of him my ticket change had a tacked on fee for him because he spoke to the ticketing agent for me. The ticketing agent kept looking at him like he was asking him to do something he shouldn’t. Every time I opened my phone to call someone he would snap at me, “CLOSE IT! CLOSE IT!!” I was trying to Whatsapp someone so they could see him in case I got into trouble with him. Trigger!!

#8. At a security line- He stopped and put his hand up at me and leaned into my face and said, “I help you. Now…you help me.” He rubbed his fingers and thumb together signaling he wanted cash. I had NONE! I had $20.00 in my bank account. So, I cried and said, “I am so sorry I don’t have any money. I don’t have it. If I had it I would give it to you. I am grateful for your help. Please. I am so sorry.” Who would believe I had no money. An American doing international travel with NO money at all?? I wouldn’t have believe me either. He then led me to a counter.

#9- My heart medication- He then took me to another counter. I have no idea to this day the purpose of this counter. A lady was giving me a tag for the bags I was carrying but then the airport employee demanded that I open my duffle bag to be searched. In that bag I carried my beta blocker, Atenolol. I used it for panic disorder, and whenever I had episodes of tachycardia. He threatened to seize my medication. The lady at the counter looked at him confused. I begged, “no, this is “kalp” (heart in Turkish)” and pointed to my chest.” He finally relented and again sternly said, “FOLLOW ME!”

#10- A fated intervention- There was a young man from Marmaris, Turkey who was fluent in English. He heard me speaking English and in distress with the airport employees and came over immediately and began interpreting and telling them that was my heart medication and that they shouldn’t be searching my bags or seizing my medication. He asked me where I was going, so I told him Antalya. He said, “I’m from Marmaris and I think my gate will be near yours. I can help you.” The lady gave me a ticket (with no gate number still) and I’m not sure how he knew where to go, but he grabbed my duffle bag and said, “c’mon your gate is beside mine but we need to go quick because your flight is about to leave.” So we hustled to the gate and found a spot to sit down together. I told him I was so thankful he intervened because the male airport employee was asking me for money. The young man became very upset. He said, “this gives Turkey a bad name! People like this man! He’s terrible! He shouldn’t have done this. Please don’t think bad of Turkey because of him.” His kindness was salvific. I made my flight and that trip ended up being one of the BEST vacations I’ve ever had!

In the middle of all of these fears, with less resources for help than I’d ever had, I had to dig deep into the healing process I had been practicing 3 years prior to this trip. I had to lean into the fact that I had been doing neural integration to optimize my nervous system and increase my bandwidth for pressure and stress. I had to prove to myself that I believed the empowering words of my doctor friends back home, the words of my therapist, the philosophies I’d taken on from my favorite personal growth gurus.

I HAD NO CHOICE BUT TO BELIEVE IN MY BODY and it’s ability to be strong and not die from a heart attack or end up in a foreign hospital with panic and a racing heart. I had to believe that I had the inward power to control my mind so that my previous mental health issues wouldn’t put me in danger or ruin my trip.

This moment taught me how to connect to my body, believe in the fortitude of my mind, and embody adventure in the midst of catastrophe. This is why travel is so important to me. This is why I want to empower others to travel. I’ve not had one panic episode since this trip almost 3 years ago. I am stronger, happier, and more centered than I’ve ever been. And, I am here to help you create that reality for yourself…via travel.

Your trusty travel agent,

Cozett Dunn

For travel deals, perks and insider information on travel and to sign up to my free newsletter visit: www.cozettdunn.inteletravel.com

Silent Retreat Please

As I’m lying here with heavy eyes I find myself longing to escape to some prolonged silent retreat. It’s a soul’s longing. Deep. Not quite guttural but definitely gritty.

At this time I feel like I want to take a solid 90 days in silence. No TV, phone, etc. Just me and the void. I feel like unless I can get into this kind of setting I’m always going to feel void on the inside. Like I have to create a larger more spacious void outside of the smaller void that is within me. It seems a larger and exterior void would be able to absorb the void within me…and essentially rid me of it that I might be truly whole for the first time in my life.

I am so much stronger than I give myself credit for. But, it’s because I’ve been in either 1 of 2 states nearly the entirety of my life thus far. 1. Panic 2. Numbness. Fluctuating between the two. The strain to be in such constant states while fighting with everything you have on the inside to stop feeling the panic and then admonishing myself for being numb. Ugh. Like my soul was acidic.

I just feel this need to detach and reflect and just be quiet. For a very long time.

Love,

Cozett

Who..Are You Made Of?

For years I have heard the famous saying, “you are the average of the five people you spend the most time with” by motivational speaker, Jim Rohn. Also, “show me your friends and I’ll show you your future.” This concept has never sat well with me. When I first heard it my immediate instinct was that it is yet another shame tactic wielded at us by toxic positivity culture. It literally felt like a blow to the gut. I got the gist of it. I knew the person quoting it was well intentioned and has a heart the size of Texas. But, still it felt like a bit of a blow. The psychology nerd in me began analyzing the essence of the statement and trying to discern if there was perhaps a bit of an egoic angle that this phrase was birthed in. I also felt it was a very unfair and uninformed statement. What about someone who is part of a dysfunctional family and they live in poverty? Maybe they don’t have access to higher education. Maybe they don’t have a vehicle and so they are at home most of the time with the dysfunctional. And, where they live is a high crime rate but they can’t get out because they have no car and no money. Naturally, they’re going to spend the most time with these people. And, if you’ve ever been poor you know you don’t have the privilege to just up and switch the company you keep. You can’t go from living in the projects to rubbing shoulders with Harvard graduates all because you decide to. It’s not that simple. There is no straight path for this societal transition typically. So, you can see why I felt this statement was a slight moreso than motivational. It takes time, effort, money, opportunity, preparation, and so much more to bridge the contrast between these two worlds.

But, it’s in the liminal space of those two worlds where I find the most motivation, true progress, and the magic of alchemy. For me it’s neither the projects nor the prestige that hold my attention. It’s the thresh hold moments. The crossing. The journey. It’s not the 1st step or the thousandth mile that impress me. It’s the 500th mile. That place where you’ve exhausted all your anticipation energy. The place where you realize you’re a long way from home but still have a brutally long way to go and you’re running on fumes much earlier than you thought you might. It’s where you simultaneously experience the fear of being finally and fully outside your comfort zone but your destination is no where in sight and you’re not sure if you will ever feel safety again. Where you question your resilience and your resolve. Where your self-defeating thoughts bite into your skin because you’re forcing them out of your mind but your heart feels alive with fervored and fevered hope. Where adrenaline wraps around every cell in your body urging you to either fight, flee or freeze. That is the place I am most impressed with. Not the summit. Not the valley. The slopes. The narrow windy paths where you trudge past the bodies of those who didn’t make it. Sounds intense doesn’t it? That’s because the journey of life is intense and because the degree of rewards it offers to those who dare to journey far surpass the degree of the depths suffered. It’s the risk/reward factor. Some of us play not to lose. And some of us play to win. This was a huge mindset shift for me. Super recent so it’s still very fresh in the energy of the motivation it carries.

Now, back to the statement we are unpacking. Recently, I traveled to Turkey. Solo. Me! A person with a history of prolonged and frequent trauma. A person with a history of panic disorder and generalized anxiety. At this moment a middle-aged woman who is overweight. A woman with sleep apnea and hypothyroidism. A woman with Epstein-Barr. A divorced, child-free woman. A former evangelist who became disillusioned and burned out from the pressure of full-time ministry and a full-time sales job that is commission only. A woman with a wild life experience and even wilder dreams and desires. Me.

If you’ve ever traveled through the Atlanta airport you have probably heard it is the largest airport in the world. However, Istanbul airport has expanded and is now larger than Atlanta. This is where my breakthrough came. In Istanbul. Alone. Surrounded by people who couldn’t understand me. Surrounded by signs in a language I didn’t understand. On my way to a paradise called, Antalya. My belief was that what awaited me in Antalya was going to more than make up for enduring my 11 hour flight, 36 hours of no sleep, little to no food, slight dehydration, anxiety, confusion and my F3 responses. I could have never known that it was in Istanbul airport that I would not only conquer those obstacles that existed in the moment but all the fears that had defeated me and stood in my way for a span of 42 years. All of them.

As I landed in Istanbul I fully expected to hop off the plane and experience the relief of a simple journey to my connecting flight. Wow was I seriously uninformed. I come from a family of engineers, addicts, and chaos. When I tell you that I am a planner when it comes to disaster planning…know that I am the epitome of that. I have always been forced to figure out how I’m going to survive. So, I research. I look at all angles and scenarios that could possibly happen that I might need to guard against. Because of this those closest to me feel I am a bit of a pessimist. But, I’ve lived worst case scenarios so often that that thought process had formed a well-worn groove in my brain. For some people missing a flight isn’t a near insurmountable pressure unless of course there is a serious emergency. But, for me to stand in the massive space of Istanbul airport, fighting anxiety, not understanding the language, switching a 20 lbs duffle bag (that had no wheels, ugh) from one shoulder to the next and the strap chaffing my skin, not being understood by anyone I asked for help, knowing that if I missed a flight and had to sleep in the airport with hardly any money to change my flight, not having my cpap machine and a history of sleeplessness….it was a big freaking deal.

So how did I get through this? It certainly wasn’t my planning skills. They were totally out the window upon stepping foot into that airport. The sense of doom I felt was palpable. A man who pretended to be a good Samaritan but ultimately pressured me to give him my money or else was the icing on the cake. I literally stopped in the middle of the airport and doubled over crying. What I didn’t find out until later was that in Turkish culture they believe it is bad luck to panic or express duress. Much like the law of attraction they feel it only draws more duress and effects everyone around who is witnessing it. So, I must have appeared like a walking bad luck charm, ha ha.

So many moments I had to stop walking and drop my duffle bag (which I ditched before I came back home. I would have burned the damn thing if I could have.) I would do breathing exercises and just allow myself to cry and not think about what the masses of people around me thought about my breakdown. I would fix my mind on my future. I would have moments of veil-piercing clarity where I could hear the voice of the Holy Spirit, of God, and Jesus. I could feel the promptings of angelic presence pushing me to keep pressing and getting me unstuck from my freeze response. I began to dig down deep and all that I had learned in my life and believed about myself, whether positive or negative fully surfaced into my conscious mind. All of it. All at once. I was having a life-shattering awakening in the middle of hundreds of people who had no idea who I was or where I came from or where I was going. Nor did they care. My support team of friends and family and ANY person I could have summoned as a safe space or protector was approximately 6,000 miles away. And it was in the ice cold shock of that full realization that my mind began to sift through all of the progress I’ve made concerning healing from trauma and anxiety over the last 3 years…and those who were largely responsible for my enormous growth and healing. The people I had surrounded myself with.

I began to inventory all those I had spent the most time with over the previous 3 years. Before this I had spent several years in isolation from friends and family because I was reeling from the reality of leaving my husband, hating my job, resenting religion and suffering tremendous mental, physical, emotional and financial hardship. I’m like the dog or cat who when they get sick they wander off to die alone. Where no one can find them or see their pain. After facing a life-threatening cancer scare with the brother I grew up with (and whom I loved like a mother because I had to protect him as best I could from our mother) I had exhausted every single tool I had. I was on Paxil and a beta blocker to help me fight anxiety and depression and keep my heart rate under control because the stress had gotten to me so much I was tachycardic. Especially in my sleep. Intuitively I understood that my uncontrollable adrenaline, and inability to socialize was a result of a burned out nervous system. But, as someone with no college degree and no medical training I had NO idea how to understand what my nervous system was doing, how to help it, or if recovering my mental and physical faculties was even a possibility. ALL of what I was learning was initiated by my intuition alone. I began Google researching the nervous system. And by some miracle (or because Google collects our searches and then presents us with content they think we might utilize) I came across an ad on Facebook for some new vitalistic chiropractors in my city. They were advertising an event that was donation only (thank God because I was broke) called, “Dinner with the Docs.” And get this…the event was all about learning about the nervous system and a promise of the ability of the body to heal itself once the nervous system is unblocked and its bandwidth increased. Wow!! What an opportunity! What timing! At this point I had been housebound for almost 30 days waiting on the Paxil to kick in so I could fake normalcy when I finally did have to leave my house. The fatigue from stress had my entire body hurting. My eyes hurt and burned and were super dry all the time from stress. Weird I know. But, it was a symptom for me. So, venturing out to this event was something I perceived as a risk. It could be catastrophic. I could get there and have to walk further than my pounding heart was comfortable with. I could get there and have a panic attack in front of a crowd of strangers. I could get there and they could turn out to be all talk and unimpressive and be peddling a bunch of bunk. And then all that precious hard fought for energy would be wasted. But, the nervous system. If I could learn even a basic function of it I felt confident that I could lean on my intuition to help me gain the knowledge and education to see if there was hope for recovering and feeling even an ounce better than I did. So. I went.

When I arrived they had some great food set out. I remember the pasta salad was on point! ha ha. There was a good crowd of people and I shared a table with several strangers. I sat uncomfortably and on edge praying I wouldn’t panic and that I could stay through the entire presentation. Suddenly some high energy music came on and I knew it was leading to a likely intro to the doctors. I felt immediate skepticism and the high energy music filled me with dread. It was almost triggering for me. Dr. Matt Smith ran out onto the stage high-fiving people with a huge smile on his face. My first thought was, “must be nice to have all that energy.” He spoke only a few moments and then requested that we all stand and lift our hands in the air. He told us to smile the cheesiest smile we could. He told us to lightly march in place. I was like, “c’mon man, really? It’s all I can do to appear sane and now I have to smile and exert myself??” After we did this he instructed us to scan our bodies and see if we didn’t feel at least a measure of more energy. I reluctantly admitted to myself that I did, ha ha. He started out with the first law of thermodynamics that states that “energy cannot be created or destroyed. Only transformed from one form to another.” I was now on the hook. He spent the next 45 minutes explaining in simple terms how the nervous system works and…how we can harness its power. I will never forget one of the lessons I learned about my amazing body that day. He explained that within each human nervous system there is enough electricity to power the city of Chattanooga for 30 days. I knew in that moment that I must have untapped resources within myself in spite of the burnout. My life trajectory changed that day.

The next 3 years I spent the most time going to see him and his amazing wife, Dr. Monica Smith. I also had connected with an amazing counselor that my cousin and best friend recommended. And, she also moved in with me during that time. Later on I met the family members of Dr. Matt and Dr. Monica who are also vitalistic doctors and a functional nutritionist. Every week I was learning something new about the resilience of the body. Every month I attended some extra function or class they offered about neural integration, manifesting your dreams, neuroscience, meditation and breath work classes. I began exploring yoga at a local studio, also at the recommendation of my cousin and connected with more heart-centered and wise healers.

As I stood in Istanbul airport I thought back to every word that Dr. Matt, Dr. Monica, Dr. Loren, Dr. Erica, Dr. Bryan and his wife Stephani had ever said to me or that I heard them teach. I thought on all the times my cousin prodded me into optimism by saying, “anything can happen.” Instead of reflecting on the toxic traits of my family of origin I began to think about their remarkable survival and adaptation skills. My great grandmothers who were pioneer women. My mamaw who raised me and has suffered at least as much trauma as I have if not more because of her age and exposure and how she has lived 86 years and only been to the doctor maybe 3 or 4 times and has never taken medication of any kind to help her cope with the catastrophes that seemed to constantly abound. Miraculously she is a kind and mentally and emotionally stable person. Her fortitude is awe-inspiring. I thought about my mother who in spite of all the pain she caused us and herself probably has the strongest will to live and physical bounce back of any person I’ve ever known. She has overdosed and died at least a half dozen times. She hasn’t taken care of her body. She’s been on ventilators and in ICUs her entire life. She stands at about 5 feet tall and is no bigger than a minute. Yet she has fought off men twice her size and been beat till she bled out into shock. I come from a line of women who seem to defy the laws of nature when it comes to survival. This is my DNA. And, even if those things couldn’t be said of my lineage I am a part of the human race!! There is nothing that has come at us that we have not only survived but thrived in the face of. Blights, wars, famines, plagues, pandemics, astronomical events…and we march right on.

This is where preparation met opportunity for me. My preparation was a combination of my heritage and the people I had surrounded myself with 3 years before I stood in Istanbul airport. And the opportunity that laid before me was to conquer every fear I had ever had. This was about so much more than taking a much needed vacation in an exotic country. I had a dawning realization that I had surrounded myself with the best, brightest, most intelligent and loving doctors and healthcare professionals this world has to offer and they had become friends to me. Confidantes. Allies for my health goals. Allies for my cautious optimism. All I had learned from them was being put into action. Their wisdom, their education, their training, their own intuitive insights, their friendship and support.

In spite of my initial discomfort with that famous statement coined by Jim Rohn I realized in the airport it had become an auspicious truth for me. My gratitude soared in spite of my hampered steps. I looked back and realized that I had gone from being house bound to traveling solo to one of the most wildly interesting countries on the planet. Where east meets west. Where European style is customized by Middle Eastern influence. Me. Little ole stressed out me from Tennessee.

I will never be the same woman I was before I landed in Istanbul. I will never be the same concoction that I was before I met the amazing team at Rev Centre for Optimal Living. I am now enjoying my discovery of not just what I am made of…but who I am made of. And, I pray that you get to experience the same cataylistic power.

Love,

Cozett

Don’t Suffer The Pain Of Inaction: One Percent More

Today you have an opportunity.  Today you have the ability to do 1% more than you did yesterday to achieve your goals and live out your wildest dreams.

For me I’ve always feared the regret of inaction more than the fear of taking the wrong action.

I’ve seen first hand how analysis paralysis and indecision can negatively impact the future of a person. Analysis paralysis is cousin to fear. And, I hate that whole family 

Today I’m issuing you another call to courage.  To believe in yourself and your massive intuitive abilities.   You CAN trust yourself.   YOU are your greatest resource.  But, how can you discover the gold mine that is you if you refuse to explore and tap into who you suspect yourself to be.

Are you really that great??  Yes.  Yes, you are.

You see it is the core of who you are that is a gift to the world. Unfortunately, from the day we are born until the day we die that core us covered over every day with layers of obligations that are NOT in alignment with our ultimate purpose or deepest desires.

Is it not a gift to be a good son, daughter, wife, husband, aunt, sibling, community organizer activist, etc?  Of course it is!  But, the secret to a fulfilled life and achieved destiny is not to be these things to the detriment of your soul’s calling.

None of the roles that you operate in should eclipse the expression of your most authentic self.  They can be beautiful vehicles for that expression to be sure.  But, if you ever find yourself feeling lost to motherhood, fatherhood, being a boss, being a religious leader or whatever then that is a key indicator that your role has eclipsed your soul.

Maybe you’ve been wading around in indecision for a long time.  Years perhaps.  Maybe you’ve been saying to yourself that if you just had a sign then that would be your permission to set yourself free of all that holds you back.  With that said…here’s your sign.

I love you.  And I don’t want to see you sacrifice the great adventure that is wrapped up and encoded in your DNA.  I don’t want to see you suffer and come to me in counseling one day for the, “I wish I would have…”

My message to you is, “just do it already!”  Dive!  Take that break.   Take that vacation. Open your mind to the things that intrigue you but scare you at the same time because you’re afraid of what people would think…if they knew you…thought.

This is YOUR life and you don’t owe it to anyone.  Your life is your own.  It’s your puzzle, your mystery, your source of delight, your source of endless curiosity, your compass, your vehicle for radically experiencing planet Earth.  The planet is a beautiful and wild place.   There are people just waiting for you to cross their path and set them free.  To show them the lessons you’ve learned.   To offer your depth of insight from the life you’ve learned.

But how will you ever experience that.  That satisfaction.  If you won’t allow yourself to move forward?

I’m gonna keep issuing this call until there is an entire global revolution at my feet. I can promise you that. It is part of my destiny and wildest dreams to help you achieve yours.

Love,
Cozett

Assessing My F3 Response: Becoming Bulletproof Journal Entry

I’ve just started, “Becoming Bulletproof” by Evy Poumpouras. I had this book in my Amazon cart for a little while. As someone who has had a life filled with battling anxiety, the title appealed to me for obvious reasons. But, it wasn’t until my most recent trip to Turkey that I felt a nudge from Spirit and a deep resonance in my soul to go ahead and purchase it. In fact it was about two days before I was to fly home back to the states that I clearly heard the Spirit say to me, “what is in your future will require you to be bulletproof.” In that moment I had forgotten that I even had the book in my cart. I was moving about my hotel room packing and began quietly mulling over what I had just heard as well examine the emotions and feelings that came up as a result. As I folded and separated my dirty clothes from my clean clothes the feelings I was able to identify clued me in on what my impending future could hold. I felt feelings of hope, excitement, being respected, admired, looked to and intelligent. Now, isn’t that an odd response from a statement to an anxiety sufferer? I thought so too. But, it’s the feelings that let me know that I have one BIG adventure ahead of me. And, I need to prepare so it goes as smoothly and as fun and interesting as possible. I’m ALL about the odd and interesting. I find myself constantly immersed in the interesting. I have stories some people would never believe or imagine.

As someone who has been in counseling for years and one who practices mindfulness and meditation I have broke with thought patterns that feed fear. I’ve trained myself to distract myself and move should I start feeling bogged down with fearful thoughts. To some degree in retrospect…in this moment actually I realize I’ve lost a big part of myself to managing triggers rather than just living in the moment. At any rate, I’m about 32 pages into this book and twice now the author has prompted me to think on my fears. First to assess what I’m afraid of and second to assess my F3 responses and determine what is my most common response. Fight, flight or freeze. Both times I’ve balked at the thought of allowing any of these thoughts into my mind. My fear was…that I would become fearful if I think about it. My training has taught me to distract and get my mind to flit across the thoughts about fear like a stone skipping across a lake. To think about my destination rather than moment. And, that has served me well seriously. Instead of getting lost in thought about a doctor’s appointment I think on what I’m going to do once I leave the doctor’s office. Because, I AM going to leave. I’m not going to stop there. I have things to do and enjoy and rewards to give myself for getting through that appointment. It keeps me moving forward and gets me unstuck. Hence, the tendency I had to freeze.

As I intentioned to go ahead and get still and allow my mind to engage my fears here is what I discovered about my F3 response. My most common is to freeze. This response “comes” to me. It is one that builds in waves as my body slows to a halt. It’s progressive. It looms like an approaching hurricane as you register that you’re in its direct path and feels like you won’t be able to get out of its way in time. But, because it comes in measures and because I’ve done so much inner work I can at least identify what I need to do to begin to steer myself to a calm harbor. In these moments movement is key for me. If I’m alone I’ll usually dance if I have a good control. Or, if I don’t have good control I’ll usually uncontrollably fidget and flail a bit. On that note did you know this is actually an evolutionary response? If you’ve ever witnessed big cats in the wild you’ll notice that just after pursuing prey, fighting or other moments of challenge they will shake themselves. This is the body ridding itself of adrenaline and getting back into a parasympathetic state. Also, did you know that our sympathetic nervous system kicks in when we need to meet a challenge and our parasympathetic nervous system kicks in to help us rest and digest. They work in tandem with each other to keep us balanced out. And they do that automatically. Thank God, right?? Our bodies our awe-inspiring and ALWAYS working FOR us. Never against us. Remember that.

Next, as the author can also relate, my next common response is to fight. This is rare but it happens if I’m surprised and don’t see the threat coming. I’ll spare you the details but I’ve often sprung into fight mode when someone is aggressive towards me, wants to intimidate me or unnecessarily comes at me in anger. Other than those scenarios I freeze.

Here’s what’s most interesting to me though. Out of all that I’ve been through. My mother’s addict boyfriends, saving her life and the life of one of my brothers and the life of a stranger who was drowning at Fall Creek Falls (I couldn’t save him by going in the water after him because it was too dangerous and I’m not a strong swimmer. Instead I screamed until someone heard me and dove in after him. Two men from India there as tourists heard my cry and immediately responded. Had I not screamed he would have been dead because it was only he and I there and everyone else was downstream of the falls.) He looked me in the eyes as he went under like I had betrayed him by not helping him. I didn’t know until that night if he actually survived. Once one of the men dove in for him I ran to my car and called 911 and never looked back because I couldn’t bear seeing his body dragged out. Thankfully, he did survive and it was my voice and the skill of a stranger that saved him. In all of these things the ONLY F3 response I’ve never demonstrated is to flee. I’ve never backed down from a crisis. If it’s a personal crisis I freeze and then force myself to move. If it’s an unanticipated attack I fight. But, I’ve never fled in all of my 42 years. And in this moment that brings into focus just how bulletproof I really am.

What about you? Do you suffer from mental health issues? Panic disorder? Generalized Anxiety? It may be worth evaluating your F3 responses. You may come away with the pure gold of more confidence in yourself if you do.

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