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How your brain handles fear

Fear is the brain’s hard-wired survival mechanism. There are three key players in this system:

The thalamus is your brain’s window to the world. It receives and processes at a low level sensory input and sends messages to:
The amygdala, which scans the information for threats and musters a full body response if danger is detected, and
The prefrontal cortex. This higher level brain area integrates the sources of information and analyzes them in light of past experiences. It can keep the fear response from spiraling out of control by inhibiting the amygdala.

Click here to view these players in a rotating 3-D brain model.

The amygdala gets sensory messages from the thalamus first because it is connected along a shorter, narrower pathway than the prefrontal cortex. Plus, it receives only about five percent of the sensory input. This is a good thing. Otherwise you’d likely be overwhelmed with panic because the amygdala can unleash a powerful reaction. It prepares you to flee, fight or freeze.

Your heart starts beating rapidly
You start taking quick, shallow breaths and sweating
Your hearing and vision narrow down to pinpoint focus on the perceived threat

The prefrontal cortex receives the other 95 percent of the sensory input from the thalamus about a quarter of a second later. This brief lag with its higher functioning allows reason and experience to take hold, to expand your realm of explanations, change your perception and transform fear into something more logical. For example, realizing the banging of your front door at night is caused by the wind, not a burglar, and so you latch it tight rather than empty a shotgun round into it.

As a state and federal prosecutor, Val’s trial work was featured on ABC’S PRIMETIME LIVE, Discovery Channel’s Justice Files, in USA Today, The National Enquirer and REDBOOK. Described by Calibre Press as “the indisputable master of entertrainment,” Val is now an international law enforcement trainer and writer. She’s had hundreds of articles published online and in print. She appears in person and on TV, radio, and video productions. When she’s not working, Val can be found flying her airplane with her retriever, a shotgun, a fly rod, and high aspirations. Contact Val at www.valvanbrocklin.com.