Aware 360 Pro Application

Psychological & Physiological Response Management

Aware360 Pro – Module 11: Psychological & Physiological Response Management
Module 11 • Psychological & Physiological Response Management • Aware360 Pro

Psychological & Physiological Response Management

When real violence hits, your body changes instantly. Heart rate spikes. Breathing shifts. Vision narrows. Hearing fades. Thinking collapses.

This module teaches how the mind and body behave under threat — and how to regain control fast.

You cannot “fight your biology.” You must work with it, understand it, and leverage it to survive.

After this module you will understand:

  • The science of fear and adrenaline
  • The freeze, fight, flight & fawn responses
  • How the brain processes danger
  • Performance zones under stress
  • How to regain control of breathing, vision & thought
  • How dissociation, panic & overload occur

1. The Threat Response System

Your nervous system has one job in danger: keep you alive. To do that, it switches between two modes:

Threat Response Modes
Sympathetic – “Gas Pedal” (fight/flight)
Parasympathetic – “Brake Pedal” (calm/recovery)

Sympathetic Activation

  • Heart rate spikes
  • Breathing becomes shallow
  • Vision narrows
  • Hands shake
  • Complex thinking shuts down

Parasympathetic Activation

  • Body relaxes
  • Thinking clears
  • Breathing deepens
  • Fine motor skills return
Your performance depends entirely on which system you can access.

2. The 4 Primary Survival Responses

Survival Responses
Fight
Flight
Freeze
Fawn

Freeze

The most misunderstood response. Freeze happens BEFORE fight or flight — it’s the “processing stall” while your brain assesses danger.

Fight

Not controlled aggression — but a chaotic, instinct-driven action surge.

Flight

Rapid withdrawal, often without conscious decision. Sometimes the best option.

Fawn

Appeasement behaviour — talking softly, negotiating excessively, hoping to avoid escalation.

Nobody chooses their initial response. Training teaches you how to break out of the wrong one.

3. Adrenaline, Heart Rate & Performance Zones

Your heart rate determines what kind of performance you are capable of.

Performance Zones
60–90 BPM – Normal thinking
90–115 BPM – Optimal performance
115–145 BPM – High stress
145–175 BPM – Survival mode
175+ BPM – Panic / Shutdown

Performance Breakdown

  • Under 115 bpm = best decision-making
  • 115–145 bpm = fast reaction but reduced clarity
  • 145–175 bpm = tunnel vision, shaking
  • 175+ bpm = thinking collapses, freezing likely
You cannot rely on complex moves when your heart rate is too high. You must rely on simple, gross-motor actions.

4. Perceptual Distortions

Under high stress your senses distort reality.

  • Tunnel vision – only seeing what’s in front of you
  • Auditory exclusion – sounds become muffled
  • Time dilation – events feel slow or too fast
  • Memory gaps – critical seconds vanish
  • Distorted distance – attacker feels closer or further

Why this happens

Your brain is redirecting resources — from logic to survival systems.

Perceptual distortion is normal. It is not weakness. Training teaches you to function despite it.

5. Regaining Control – Fast Nervous System Reset Tools

These are the fastest ways to regain clarity under pressure.

A. Tactical Breathing (Combat Breathing)

  • Inhale 4 seconds
  • Hold 2 seconds
  • Exhale 6 seconds
  • Repeat 4–6 cycles

B. Peripheral Vision Reset

Shift attention from tunnel vision to the edges of your vision to calm the amygdala.

C. Grounding Cycle

  • Name 1 thing you can see
  • 1 thing you can hear
  • 1 thing you can feel

D. Physical Pattern Interrupt

A small step, posture change or movement breaks freeze and re-engages decision-making.

Your first job in a real confrontation is NOT to fight — it’s to regain the ability to *think*.

6. Dissociation, Panic & Shutdown

Severe overwhelm causes the brain to shut down connection to the moment.

Symptoms

  • Feeling “floaty” or unreal
  • Watching yourself from outside your body
  • Hearing becomes distant
  • Memory fragments

How to Overcome

  • Anchor yourself with sensation (touch something solid)
  • Use deep exhale breathing
  • Move your feet — motion resets dissociation
Dissociation is not a choice — but escaping it can be trained.

🧠 Module 11 Knowledge Test – 10 Questions

1. The sympathetic nervous system is responsible for:
2. Freeze response happens because:
3. Optimal performance heart rate zone is:
4. Tunnel vision is caused by:
5. Tactical breathing helps by:
6. Auditory exclusion means:
7. Which technique helps break dissociation?
8. The “parasympathetic system” is also called:
9. Time dilation during stress means:
10. The first job in a confrontation is: