Polyvagal Theory: Why You Freeze in Love & How to Stop It
TL;DR : The autonomic nervous system drives automatic reactions in relationships through three hierarchical states identified by Stephen Porges' polyvagal theory developed in 1994. When you feel safe, the ventral vagus nerve activates your social engagement system, allowing you to remain calm, empathetic, and emotionally regulated. Perceived threats trigger the sympathetic nervous system into fight or flight responses, causing anger, withdrawal, or avoidance, while insurmountable threats activate the dorsal vagus nerve, creating freezing, dissociation, and emotional numbness. These reactions correlate directly with attachment styles: secure attachment provides easy access to the ventral vagal state, while anxious and avoidant attachment styles oscillate between sympathetic activation and dorsal vagal shutdown. Co-regulation, where a calm partner's nervous system helps soothe an activated one, proves essential in relationships. Practical techniques to return to the ventral vagal state include extended exhale breathing, soft eye contact, prosodic speaking, humming, and cold water on the face. During conflict activation, naming your nervous system state, requesting a pause, moving your body, and breathing deeply allow you to regulate before responding. Understanding these automatic reactions as nervous system responses rather than character flaws enables conscious choice in relational interactions.
Your partner raises their voice and you freeze, unable to respond. Or else, on the contrary, you explode within seconds. Or again, you leave the room without a word. These reactions aren't conscious choices: they're driven by your autonomic nervous system. Polyvagal theory, developed by Stephen Porges in 1994, revolutionizes our understanding of these automatic reactions in relationships.
The Three States of the Nervous System According to Porges
Polyvagal theory identifies three branches of the autonomic nervous system, activated hierarchically based on the level of perceived safety:
1. Ventral Vagal: Connection and Safety
When you feel safe, the ventral vagus nerve is active. You are:
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2. Sympathetic: Fight or Flight
Faced with a perceived threat, the sympathetic system takes over. You shift into:
- Fight mode: anger, verbal aggression, criticism, accusations
- Flight mode: withdrawal, avoidance, changing the subject, leaving the room
3. Dorsal Vagal: Immobilization
If the threat is perceived as insurmountable, the dorsal vagus nerve triggers an immobilization state:
- Freezing, disconnection, dissociation
- Sensation of emotional numbness
- "I'm here but I'm not here"
- Collapse, complete passivity
Polyvagal Theory in Couple Relationships
The Attachment System and the Vagus Nerve
Attachment styles map directly onto the polyvagal model:
- Secure attachment: easy access to ventral vagal, good regulation
- Anxious attachment: frequent sympathetic activation (hyperactivation)
- Avoidant attachment: oscillation between sympathetic (flight) and dorsal vagal (shutdown)
- Disorganized attachment: rapid switching between all three states
Co-regulation
Porges emphasizes a key concept: co-regulation. We don't regulate our nervous system alone — we do it in the presence of another nervous system. A calm partner can soothe your activated nervous system. Conversely, two nervous systems in fight mode create an explosive escalation.
Practical Exercises to Regulate Your Nervous System
Returning to Ventral Vagal
- Physiological breathing: inhale through your nose (4 seconds), exhale through your mouth (8 seconds). The long exhale directly activates the vagus nerve
- Soft eye contact: looking into your partner's eyes for 30 seconds activates the social engagement system
- Prosodic voice: speaking with melodic variations (warm tone, not monotone) signals safety
- Singing, humming: directly stimulates the vagus nerve
- Cold water on your face: activates the diving reflex, slows your heart rate
In Case of Crisis
If you're in sympathetic mode (anger, panic):
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Your attachment style largely determines your polyvagal reactions in relationships. This test helps you identify your dominant pattern.
Conclusion
Polyvagal theory offers us a valuable framework for understanding our reactions in relationships. When we "lose it" or "shut down," it's not a character flaw: it's our nervous system responding to a perceived threat. Understanding this mechanism gives us the possibility of choosing a response rather than being subject to a reaction.
Gildas Garrec, CBT Psychotherapist🧠
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To deepen the concepts discussed in this article, we recommend this video:
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FAQ
What are the key warning signs that polyvagal theory is affecting my relationship?
Understand why you freeze up with loved ones using polyvagal theory. Key warning signs include persistent emotional distress specifically tied to the relationship, repetitive conflict patterns that never resolve, and growing disconnection between what you feel and what you're able to express.How does CBT approach Attachment styles in relationship therapy?
CBT identifies the automatic thoughts and avoidance behaviors that maintain relationship distress. Cognitive restructuring helps develop more balanced interpretations of a partner's behavior, while behavioral experiments test whether feared outcomes actually occur — often revealing they're less catastrophic than anticipated.When is individual therapy enough for Attachment styles, versus needing couples therapy?
Individual therapy is often the first step when one partner isn't ready for joint work, or when personal cognitive schemas are the primary driver of distress. Couples formats like EFT or the Gottman Method add significant value when both partners are engaged and the relational dynamic itself needs addressing.
About the author
Gildas Garrec · CBT Psychopractitioner
Certified practitioner in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), author of 16 books on applied psychology and relationships. Over 1000 clinical articles published across Psychologie et Serenite. Contributor to Hugging Face and Kaggle.
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