The person who thrives during a crisis and falls apart during ordinary weeks isn't broken. Their entire operating system was built for emergencies, and peace registers as a system error because they never learned what competence feels like without urgency underneath it. - Silicon Canals
Briefly

The person who thrives during a crisis and falls apart during ordinary weeks isn't broken. Their entire operating system was built for emergencies, and peace registers as a system error because they never learned what competence feels like without urgency underneath it. - Silicon Canals
"Crisis-thrivers aren't resilient. They're dysregulated. That distinction matters more than almost anything else I've written about in the last year, because the conventional reading gets it exactly backwards and the people it describes are suffering inside a framework that keeps telling them they're fine."
"The ordinary Tuesday afternoon is the test. And they fail it, repeatedly, in ways that confuse everyone including themselves. The explanation isn't weakness or laziness or some personality defect. The explanation is architectural."
"Their entire operating system was assembled under conditions of threat, and when the threat disappears, the system doesn't relax. It malfunctions. Everything that follows unpacks that single idea: how a nervous system built for emergencies turns peace into a system error."
Crisis-thrivers are often mischaracterized as resilient high performers, but they struggle with everyday life after crises. Their nervous systems, shaped by constant threat, malfunction in peaceful situations. The sympathetic nervous system, responsible for fight-or-flight responses, remains overly activated, leading to difficulties in relaxation and recovery. This dysregulation is not a sign of weakness but rather a result of their experiences. Understanding this distinction is crucial for addressing their challenges and rewriting their coping mechanisms.
Read at Silicon Canals
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