Your Body Keeps Score When Your Mind Won’t: The 7 Silent Alarms Your Nervous System Is Screaming While You ‘Hold It Together’
Let me tell you something you already know — but probably haven’t said out loud:
You’ve been white-knuckling it for years.
Not with drugs. Not with rage. Not with obvious breakdowns.
But with “holding it together.” With productivity. With niceness. With becoming the most competent person in every f*cking room.
And your nervous system? It’s screaming.
But it doesn’t use words. It uses symptoms.
So here’s what I wish someone would’ve told me back when I was crushing sales calls during the day and having panic attacks behind the wheel at night:
Your body knows you’re not safe even when your mind is pretending you are.
“Your most impressive skills aren’t accomplishments…they’re adaptations. Your hyper-competence, your constant vigilance, your ability to power through? Those aren’t personality traits. They’re survival responses.”
Here are 7 silent alarms it might be sounding while you fake fine.
1. The 3 AM Emergency Broadcast System
You fall asleep exhausted. But at 3:17 AM, your eyes snap open. Heart racing. Mind spinning. Every. Single. Night.
Your mind: “I just need a better sleep routine.”
Your body: “Sleep isn’t safe. Danger could come while we’re unconscious.”
This isn’t insomnia, it’s your body’s emergency alert system.
When you experience trauma, your brain rewires itself to scan constantly for threats. Even years later, your nervous system remains convinced that letting your guard down during deep sleep could be lethal. So it jolts you awake precisely when you should be entering your deepest sleep cycle.
I spent two years thinking I had a sleep disorder. Tried every supplement, sleep hygiene trick, and breathing technique. None of it touched this problem. Because this wasn’t about sleep quality — it was about my nervous system believing that unconsciousness equals vulnerability.
The cruel irony: this protective mechanism is actually killing you slowly through sleep deprivation. Your body’s attempting to save your life by slowly destroying it.
And that melatonin? It’s like putting duct tape over the check engine light. The warning system isn’t the problem.
2. You Can’t Catch Your Breath — But You’re Not Out of Shape
You’re just sitting at your desk. No one’s chasing you. You didn’t run a marathon.
And yet your chest tightens. You sigh constantly. You forget how to breathe deeply.
Your mind: “Maybe I should get my lungs checked.”
Your body: “We need to stay ready to run or fight at any moment.”
That’s not a respiratory issue. That’s your nervous system in fight or flight convinced you’re still in danger.
Look, your breathing is directly wired to your autonomic nervous system. When your body perceives threat (even if your rational mind doesn’t), it automatically shifts your breathing to prepare for action. Shallow, upper-chest breathing keeps you ready to move, fight, or flee at a millisecond’s notice.
The kicker? This pattern becomes so normal you stop noticing it. I went years thinking everyone felt like they couldn’t get a full breath. I only realized how constricted my breathing was when a trauma therapist pointed out I hadn’t taken a complete inhale during our entire session.
“It’s not breathlessness. It’s the body saying, ‘We don’t have time to rest. We’re not safe yet.’”
“The body’s language is symptoms. What you call chronic illness, I call desperate Morse code from a system that’s been screaming for years while you’ve been trained to ignore it.”
3. You Feel Exhausted After Doing Absolutely Nothing
You slept 8 hours. You didn’t do anything strenuous. But by 2pm, you feel like you’ve been hit by a truck.
Your mind: “I must be getting sick or I’m just lazy.”
Your body: “Conserving energy is our only option in a situation beyond our control.”
That’s not laziness. It’s not burnout. It’s freeze mode. Your system is conserving energy because it doesn’t trust the world.
The freeze response is what happens when fight and flight aren’t viable options. Your body essentially shuts down non-essential functions to conserve energy. The devastating part? This biological survival mechanism gets misinterpreted as character failure by others and by yourself.
I can’t tell you how many times I called myself lazy, unmotivated, or broken when I was actually stuck in a physiological shutdown state. I tried to willpower my way through it, which only deepened the exhaustion.
That bone-deep fatigue isn’t because you’re weak. It’s because your nervous system has been running a marathon every day just trying to keep you safe.
“You’re not tired. You’re trapped.”
4. You Can’t Sit Still — Even When You Want To
You try to meditate. Your leg starts bouncing. You open your laptop. You suddenly need to clean your entire kitchen.
Your mind: “I’m just not good at relaxing.”
Your body: “Movement equals survival. Stillness equals death.”
Welcome to flight mode.
Your brain thinks movement = safety. Stillness feels like death. Because when you were still, something bad happened. And your body remembered.
The human nervous system evolved with a simple equation: movement = life, while immobility often meant you were dead or about to be. When your system has experienced overwhelming events, that equation becomes hardwired. The result? Your restlessness isn’t ADHD or character flaw — it’s survival intelligence.
This is why “just relax” is the most useless advice for trauma survivors. Your fidgeting, pacing, and constant motion aren’t personal failings — they’re physiological imperatives. Your body is literally saying: “Keep moving or die.”
“You call it hustle. Your nervous system calls it escape.”
“Your productivity isn’t ambition. It’s avoidance. Your perfectionism isn’t excellence. It’s protection. Your overthinking isn’t anxiety. It’s surveillance. You’ve been running a security company when what you need is a sanctuary.”
5. You’re Clenching Everything — And Don’t Even Notice
Your jaw is tight. Your fists are curled. Your stomach feels like a rock. And you didn’t even know you were doing it.
Your mind: “I must be stressed about work.”
Your body: “I need to be ready for attack at any moment.”
That’s your body bracing for impact. Even if there’s no impact coming.
The constant muscular tension, especially in the jaw, shoulders, and core is your body’s way of maintaining a perpetual shield. It’s exhausting, but your nervous system believes it’s necessary for survival.
I spent years with chronic jaw pain, spending thousands on dentists, night guards, and TMJ specialists. Not one of them identified what my body tension actually was: stored trauma preparing for the next blow.
The most sinister part? This chronic tension becomes your normal state. You don’t even register it as discomfort anymore — just your default setting. That’s why you’re often unaware of how much you’re holding until someone touches your shoulders and you nearly jump through the ceiling.
“Your body doesn’t know the trauma is over. So it keeps the armor on.”
6. The Phantom Pain Syndrome
The migraine that appears before difficult conversations. The stomach pain that coincides with work stress. The lower back pain that comes and goes with no apparent physical cause.
Your mind: “I need better medical care for all these random issues.”
Your body: “I’m storing your unprocessed emotions in your physical tissue.”
Doctors run tests. Everything comes back normal. They suggest stress management. You feel dismissed.
Here’s what’s actually happening: your body converts emotional distress into physical pain when you exceed your capacity to process it consciously. This isn’t psychosomatic in the dismissive sense — it’s a legitimate neurophysiological response.
When emotions aren’t metabolized, they get stored in your fascia, muscle tissue, and nervous system. Your chronic neck tension isn’t just poor ergonomics — it’s fear, stored in the tissue. Your IBS isn’t just dietary sensitivity — it’s boundary violations compressed into gut dysfunction.
I spent over $30,000 on medical testing, specialists, and procedures for mysterious physical symptoms. All while numbing out emotionally, priding myself on my rationality. My body was screaming what my mind refused to say: I wasn’t okay.
The kicker: pharmaceutical interventions often fail because they’re targeting the symptom, not the cause. Your body isn’t malfunctioning — it’s speaking the only language it knows will finally get your attention.
“You don’t have a mystery illness. You have unprocessed trauma. The problem isn’t in your body, the truth is.”
7. You’re Always ‘On’ — Even in Silence
You go home. No one’s around. But your brain keeps scanning as if someone’s about to yell, judge, or leave.
Your mind: “I just overthink things sometimes.”
Your body: “Constant surveillance kept us alive before. We can’t stop now.”
That’s not overthinking. That’s hypervigilance. And it’s not a flaw. It’s the survival instinct of someone who learned early: silence isn’t always safe.
Hypervigilance is the constant scanning of your environment for threats. But in trauma survivors, the definition of “threat” becomes disturbingly broad: a certain tone of voice, a specific facial expression, or even just an unexpected noise can trigger the full alarm system.
I used to pride myself on my “ability to read a room.” What I didn’t realize was that this wasn’t social intelligence — it was trauma-induced hypervigilance. I wasn’t reading rooms; I was scanning for threats. Every micro-expression, tone shift, or ambiguous comment became a potential attack my system needed to prepare for.
“Stillness doesn’t feel peaceful. It feels suspicious.”
The Chronic Dissociation Default
You frequently feel slightly disconnected from your surroundings. You “zone out” during conversations. You can’t remember your drive home. You feel like you’re watching your life through a slightly foggy window.
Your mind: “I’m just spacey sometimes.”
Your body: “Reality became unbearable, so I created an escape hatch.”
This isn’t absent-mindedness — it’s dissociation, your brain’s built-in emergency exit. When physical escape wasn’t possible, dissociation provided a neurological escape, dampening sensory input and creating psychological distance from unbearable experiences.
The insidious part: what began as an emergency response becomes your baseline state. You dissociate not just during active stress but preventatively, staying slightly disconnected from reality at all times.
I spent years not feeling fully present in my own life, describing it as “watching myself in a movie.” I thought it was just how my brain worked. I had no idea it was a sophisticated protection mechanism, keeping me partly absent from my own experience because full presence had once been too painful to bear.
And here’s the darker truth: successful, high-functioning people often dissociate so seamlessly that even they don’t recognize it’s happening. Your ability to “power through” might actually be sophisticated dissociation wearing a productivity mask.
“Your ‘high-functioning’ is actually evidence of how deeply wounded you are. The more seamlessly you operate while disconnected from yourself, the more practice you’ve had at surviving the unsurvivable.”
You Feel Numb — But Somehow Still Anxious
You don’t feel joy. You don’t feel fear. You just feel…blank.
Except your chest is tight. Your heart is racing. Your gut says something’s wrong.
Your mind: “I’m just emotionally stable and logical.”
Your body: “Emotions were dangerous, so I shut down that circuit.”
Welcome to functional freeze. This is what high-functioning people look like in shutdown: composed on the outside, crumbling underneath.
This contradiction, emotional numbness paired with physical anxiety symptoms, is the hallmark of trauma. Your cognitive mind has successfully disconnected from emotional processing, but your body still carries the response.
I spent years priding myself on being “rational, not emotional.” People came to me for level-headed advice precisely because I didn’t get swept up in feelings. What I didn’t understand: this wasn’t emotional maturity — it was emotional amputation. I wasn’t choosing logic over emotion; I was physiologically incapable of accessing my feelings.
“It’s not emotional stability. It’s emotional lockdown.”
You Can’t Cry — Until You Absolutely Break
You stay strong for everyone. You say you’re fine. You mean it.
Until one tiny moment — a song, a delay, a dumb comment — and suddenly you’re sobbing in a parking lot.
Your mind: “I don’t know where that came from. I must be stressed.”
Your body: “I’ve been holding back a tsunami. The dam finally broke.”
This is your nervous system discharging stored survival energy. Because it couldn’t leak out before. So it explodes when it can.
The giveaway: when something minor finally does crack the façade, the response is disproportionate. That’s the circuit temporarily coming back online and releasing accumulated emotional charge.
I remember sitting in my car sobbing uncontrollably because a drive-thru got my order wrong. It wasn’t about the food. It was about months of compressed emotion finding the one tiny crack in my armor.
Most disturbing: you can’t selectively numb emotions. When you shut down the ability to feel grief, fear, or anger, you also reduce your capacity for joy, love, and connection. Your protection from pain is also your prison.
“You weren’t faking being okay. You were surviving.”
“Your symptoms aren’t malfunctions — they’re messengers. And they will only get louder until you finally honor what they’re trying to tell you.”
Breaking the Silent Alarm Cycle
Let’s Be Clear:
Your nervous system isn’t overreacting. It’s overcompensating.
Because your trauma was real. The pressure is real. And the way you hold it together? That’s not weakness. It’s proof you’re still here.
But survival mode was never meant to be permanent.
Your exhausted nervous system isn’t broken — it’s doing exactly what it was conditioned to do. The problem isn’t the alarm system; it’s that you’ve gotten so used to the sirens that you don’t hear them anymore.
The work isn’t silencing these alarms — it’s finally listening to what they’re telling you.
Recovery begins with two radical premises: your body isn’t lying, and your symptoms aren’t the problem — they’re the solution your body created to an impossible situation.
For me, healing started when I stopped fighting my body’s signals and started translating them instead. My insomnia wasn’t a sleep disorder; it was stored fear seeking resolution. My chronic pain wasn’t medical mystery; it was embodied grief. My dissociation wasn’t spaciness; it was my brain’s desperate attempt at harm reduction.
The pathway back requires more than cognitive understanding. Your thinking brain didn’t create these patterns, and it can’t think its way out of them. You need interventions that speak directly to the nervous system — somatic experiencing, EMDR, neurofeedback, polyvagal-informed therapy, and specifically targeted physical practices.
The most unbearable truth is also the most liberating: your body will keep screaming until you finally listen. The volume will only increase until you respond. But when you do, when you finally turn toward these signals with curiosity instead of suppression, something extraordinary happens.
Your alarms become allies. Your symptoms become signposts. Your survival mechanisms transform from prison guards into guides leading you back home to yourself.
Your body has been keeping score all along. It’s time to stop pretending you don’t see the scoreboard.
— Cody Taymore
Kill The Silence
Free tactical tools, nervous system blueprints, and recovery guides
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H.O.L.Y. shit — never heard it explained exactly like this before and it make so much sense how you laid it all out.
This is so good. I hate that there is such a separation of mind and body rehab in terms of alcohol and drug rehab.
The western model has the science but insurance refuses to treat and pay for the whole human. Even the hormones are the Paul Revere screaming “The British are coming” before the nerves trigger the body this way.
This is why the constant psychosocial and environmental stress is so much more damaging than getting physically beat up alone.
The body knows how to take impacts and heal from day one but sometimes our nervous system or gut and hormones are just not developed enough to deal with the load anytime we are not embodied, be it developmentally or trauma induced.
Dis-eases are simply a neuro immune, stress induced breakdown someplace and the body ending up getting the wrong communication after that.