Sunday, November 7, 2021

When we let fear rule

 One thing has become very clear in the time of Covid and that is, the most compliant are the most frightened.


The lack of rational thinking on the issue seems to increase with each Jab and the mere fact anyone can think that two Jabs, let alone four Jabs, would be required for something which is supposed to be a vaccine, i.e. create immunity, indicates a severe lack of reason and capacity for rational thought.

This is why the Jabbed so fear the Unjabbed because any challenge to their decisions or positions intensifies their sense of fear. This is how societies have always been divided and how tyranny rules. Some people are more easily frightened than others; some ages are more easily frightened than others, but the vast majority of people fear disease and death and anything which embraces those two fears is powerful indeed and terribly dangerous.

The Government handling, with the help of science-medical advisers (one hesitates to call them experts) and the media, has constituted a terrorist attack on society and on the minds of individual. It has been traumatic. It was meant to be traumatic because the fearful are more easily controlled.

Understand how fear works. What calms the compliant and the Jabbed is the belief they were right and everyone else agrees.

Quote: The impact of fear on the human brain is very powerful: it completely changes the way we process information.

“When people are frightened, the parts of the brain that are responsible for rational thinking cease to dominate”, Dr. Bruce Perry explains, quoted in an article published on the Time magazine website.

When faced with a threat, the cortex, which is responsible for risk assessment and actions, ceases to function. In other words, logical thinking is replaced by overwhelming emotions, thus favoring short-term solutions and sudden reactions.

On the other hand, interpretation of the environment helps us to survive disasters. Joseph LeDoux, professor of psychology at New York University, explains that this mechanism “monopolizes the brain resources to help face the threat”.

This type of behavior has advantages and disadvantages. Rapid response helps us guard against unexpected attacks. Furthermore, the risk assessment failure can be as dangerous.

A traumatic event has long-term consequences. Anything that reminds us about the threat triggers an involuntary state of fear. Events of this type lead to chain reactions in the human brain: people become more anxious, the reaction rate increases as well as attention to any sensations that might be related to the traumatic experience.

Regarding terrorist attacks in Boston, the researchers quoted in the article believe that this general fear effect is wanted by villains. Choosing symbolic events or places is not so random.

Unfortunately, due to this impact of fear, people prefer to take refuge in harmful habits in an attempt to cope with these unsettling emotions. For example, they may start drinking more alcohol or taking sedatives. Sleep does not help to eliminate negative emotions and painful moments fixed in our memory or reduce the risk of post-traumatic stress (PTSD).

But statistics show that approximately 80% of those exposed to trauma will not suffer from PTSD. Studies also suggest that socialization and expressing emotions have a calming effect.

Valerie Soleil, B.A., LL.B.
Content editor & staff writer at Learning Mind
Valerie Soleil is a writer with over 5 years of experience and holds a bachelor's degree in law and a B.A. in Psychology. She is a physical & mental health enthusiast who constantly expands her knowledge about the mysteries of the human body and mind.