One of the things that I’ve focused on for the last several years is controlling brain state and chemistry under extreme stress.
In a life & death situation, an unregulated fight or flight response will hurt your ability to see, think, hear, use your fingers, and more.
If you can regulate your fight or flight response so that you get the optimum arousal level…optimum levels of adrenaline, noradrenaline, endorphins, cortisol, etc. your much more likely to be able to keep a cool head and perform better in life or death situations.
When you get into a situation that your brain thinks is a life or death situation, you have the ability to view it through a lens. Sometimes, with a lens, you can move it so that it magnifies the image. Your brain does the same thing. It can make a situation seem much worse than it is and over-react.
If you move that same lens, if you move it, you can cause the image to appear much smaller than it really is. Your brain can do this too, and allow you to stay calm in a very stressful situation.
A lot of people don’t know how to control their responses to stressful situations. Others have head knowledge about how to control their mind in extreme stress situations, but aren’t exposed to controlled stress often enough to develop the skill.
It’s similar to factually knowing how to throw a pass when your offensive line is falling apart and 900 pounds of defensive linemen are racing at you and actually being able to do it in the Super Bowl. KNOWING how to do something is great. Actually being able to do it under extreme stress takes some practice.
So how do you go about controlling your response to stress? More specifically, what can you do in your own home now that will help you during a sympathetic fight or flight stress response?
Amazingly enough, my initial exposure to this happened when I was about 6-7 years old!
I had incredibly bad allergies and was the youngest person at that time to get a full allergy skin test panel. My back, arms, and legs were covered front and back with more than 120 needle pricks that they’d put drops of allergens on to test my reaction so they could make up customized allergy shots for me.
At the same time, I had bad migraines and they thought I had Raynaud’s syndrome (very cold fingers and toes), so they had me try something that they’d just started testing at the Mayo Clinic.
When you have a sympathetic stress response, which you can get from allergic reactions, one of the things that happens is that the body shuts off blood flow to the fingers and toes.
So they gave me a tiny handheld thermometer and challenged me to hold it between my thumb and index finger and make the temperature go up and down by focusing on the thermometer and changing my breathing.
At first it was just happening randomly and I’d get really happy when I made the temperature go up. Within a few days, I learned how to dilate and constrict my capillaries in my hands and feet at will.
I didn’t realize it at the time, but I was developing the skill to control my HPA axis (Hypothalamus, pituitary, adrenal) limbic system and my sympathetic response to stress…a skill that I’ve built on for more than 35 years and a skill that anyone can develop.
It’s a form of bio-feedback and, in short, bio-feedback is measuring something that the body normally takes care of unconsciously and using your mind to change those measurements. I don’t use a thermometer on my hands anymore, but I do use other tools for bio-feedback, including:
- A Polar heartrate monitor with Bluetooth that communicates with my iPhone and an app called SweetBeats that measures Heart Rate Variability (HRV).
- A PulseOX (blood oxygen levels) meter.
- An ear lobe heartrate monitor and the HeartMath app to measure HRV and coherence.
- A MUSE consumer grade EEG (brainwave) reader.
- A plain old heartrate monitor.
- A plain old blood pressure cuff.
Each of these can be used to monitor the body’s response to stress and help you to learn how to calm your limbic system so it won’t over-react to stress.
So, what else can you practice at home to improve your ability to perform at a high level under stress?
There are some stress modulation techniques you can do at home that are pretty deep and beyond the scope of an article that are included in Upgraded Shooter, but I can give you a couple of quick strategies. These aren’t what I’d call “normal” and I wouldn’t suggest them for most shooters. They’re not necessary, but if you’re interested in the stress aspects of defensive shooting, they’re worth exploring.
First, breathing is one of the most straight forward ways we have of controlling the autonomic nervous system to calm the mind/body in a stressful situation. When we have a sympathetic response to stress, our breathing speeds up. In turn, we can calm a sympathetic stress response with slow breathing or “combat” breathing.
Ideally, you’re going to want to breathe between 4.5 and 7 times per minute if you’re trying to calm yourself. Step 1 is to use a metronome or breathing app on your phone to get used to what that pace feels like. Step 2 is to practice breathing at that pace when you feel stressed. The HeartMath app and HRV monitor are great for this.
When I’m really amped up and can feel my heartbeat, I’ll count heartbeats to determine my breathing pace. Sometimes I breathe in for 6 beats and out for 11. Other times I’ll breathe in for 6, hold for 6, breathe out for 6, and hold for 4.
When I’m running, I’ll use steps instead of heartbeats to drive my breathing pace.
The cool thing about this is that the more you do it, the quicker your body responds and the more dramatic the response.
I use a few different techniques besides breathing. One of them is progressive muscle relaxation…relaxing from the top of my head to the bottom of my feet. Another is staring at fire or water and letting my mind wander.
Some of the methods I use are fairly controversial and very misunderstood by the general public, so I’ll just leave you with those for today.
The more you take time to calm your limbic system, the more resilient it will be to stress. You will still react to stress, but you won’t over-react as much.
Once you’ve practiced calming yourself in low stress and no-stress situations, it’s time to start gradually introducing increasing levels of stress and training your mind to stay calmer in stressful situations.
One simple tool that I use to induce stress on a regular basis is cold water. A lot of people can’t do this because of heart issues, so check with your doctor. I stand under the water in my shower with it set hot, but comfortable. Then I flip the water to all-cold. I’ll get an initial shock reaction to the water, but I’ve conditioned myself to immediately start slow calm breathing.
Another tool is to get a bowl of ice water (or break through ice in the winter) and stick my face in the water and calm myself instead of letting my body gasp and suck in air. You’re probably going to want to do this with a snorkel at first.
Both of these techniques will only work well as long as cold water causes a mild shock or sympathetic reaction. Once you get to look forward to it and it doesn’t cause as much of a stress response, you need to use another technique.
Another tool that I use to induce stress is one that I learned from the Bradley method of natural childbirthing. What you do is squeeze or press pressure points to the point of pain and then learn to relax and breathe through the pain.
Third, I will breathe all the way out, hold my breath, do a short set of pushups, stand up, and start doing dry fire reps until my mind/lungs start to panic/spasm…then hold for another 5, 10, or 20 count beyond the initial spasm. This is a VERY basic skill for free diving and it’s an effective tool for conditioning your mind to stay calm and in control when it wants to freak out and panic. (DO NOT DO THIS without asking your doc first, because there are lung and other conditions that could make this very dangerous.)
Fourth is an extreme technique. I will use a remote control dog shock collar on my upper arm, calf, or belly and practice getting zapped and then immediately drawing and engaging precision targets with a laser pistol or airsoft (not live fire). This helps with both controlling anticipatory stress and quickly calming yourself after a stress response. This technique can build people up or tear them down, depending on whether or not you use the right intensity. Inoculate…don’t scar…and don’t increase intensity too fast.
On that note, I’ve also used Tasers and stun guns for this and I don’t suggest it.
A dog shock collar still more extreme than what’s necessary for most, but is WAY more controllable and way more effective from a learning/teaching perspective. On the Garmin-Tri-Tronics adjustable models that go between an intensity of .5 and 5, I have rarely found anyone who needs to go past a “2” to get an appropriate involuntary response. Oftentimes, just re-positioning the collar slightly will let you get the same reaction with a much lower setting.
It’s important to remember that, to a large extent, just the discipline of calming your mind regularly will tone the limbic system and make it more resilient to stress. The stress testing and inoculation definitely helps, but if that’s not your cup of tea, don’t think you have to do it.
Once you’ve figured out a breathing pace that predictably relaxes you, start using it every time you shoot. As you’re getting ready to shoot, simply relax your shoulders, relax your jaw & facial muscles, and drop into that slow steady breathing pattern and it will help keep you out of fight or flight or calm your fight or flight response so that you’ll have a higher noradrenaline to adrenaline ratio to perform better but not so much that it sabotages performance.
What else can you do? You can use eating peppers that are hotter than what’s comfortable for you, competition shooting, public speaking, or anything else (including exposure to phobias) that causes a stress response for you.
Some days, just dealing with my sons’ non-ideal behavior gives me all the practice I need 🙂
Questions? Comments? Let me know by commenting below…
4 Comments
John
January 30, 2017“anchoring and triggering are key to what I do, but they seemed like they were beyond the scope of the article.”
Hello Ox; I hope this means you are going to write a part 2 to this article! It would be interesting to know how exactly you use these tools. There does seem to be overlap. Why measure your HRV with Polar heartrate monitor / SweetBeats and a Heartmath? I have a Heartmath, a Muse EEG (and a elecric shock collar). With the tools in place, it would be great to know how you put them together 🙂
Ox
January 31, 2017Hey John, One of the best sources of information on anchoring and triggering for controlling state in high stress shooting situations is here: http://tacticalfirearmstrainingsecrets.com/insight I’ve trained with them several times and was in the process of becoming an instructor before some health problems temporarily derailed it.
I don’t have plans to write an article going into more detail on stress induction and HRV right now…I’d be open to an online collaborative group, but it’s just too far down the rabbit hole for most people. The idea of causing minor pain to yourself or another person as a part of training makes some people almost furious.
Joe Fahy
January 21, 2017Stress inoculation has been on my mind. Your article has assisted me in moving forward. Thank you.
Joe
Mills
January 20, 2017We all love range time, the coolest tools, getting “black belts”, and increasing our knowledge on staying safe. It is sexy and boosts egos. That said, managing our mental and emotional composure is the bridge that gets us to that training. It is rarely addressed to the level it requires in much of the personal safety and defense training out there. Thank you for the great article.
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