You built it all from the ground up. The business. The new-construction house in St. Charles. The family. A fortress of stability against the chaos you survived. You did everything a man is supposed to do. You sucked it up, you pushed through, you never complained.

And now you're standing in the middle of it all, and it's quiet. Too quiet. Your wife is asking you what you're feeling, and the only honest answer is… nothing. Just a hollow, buzzing silence. A ghost town.

The lie you've been forced to live by is that vulnerability is death. That if you admit you're in pain, your entire world will collapse.

That numbness isn't toughness. It's a biological failsafe. Your nervous system, like a city's power grid during a catastrophic storm, has initiated an emergency blackout to prevent a total meltdown. It's not a character flaw; it's an advanced survival protocol you mastered long ago.

The Neuroscience of a Blackout

To understand this numbness, you have to understand your body's power grid: the autonomic nervous system. You were told your only options in the face of a threat were to fight or to flee. But there is a third, more ancient survival mechanism: to freeze.

Think of your nervous system like the electrical system you'd install.

  • A "fight-or-flight" response is like a circuit breaker tripping in one room — it's a localized, high-energy event.
  • The freeze response is different. It's the main breaker at the box being thrown. It's a total, system-wide power cut to the "non-essential" circuits to conserve energy for basic survival. And the first circuits to go dark are the ones that carry the immense energy of emotion.

This is a biological failsafe detailed in Polyvagal Theory called the Dorsal Vagal response. And research confirms it operates on a predictable hierarchy: the Autonomic Nervous System functions on a three-level ladder — Social Engagement (Ventral Vagal), Mobilization (Sympathetic), and Immobilization (Dorsal Vagal). Numbness is the bottom rung. Your system didn't skip the other levels — it tried fight, it tried flight, and when neither worked, it did the only thing left: it shut down.

The Disconnect You Can't Name

Here's the research that explains why your wife's question — "What are you feeling?" — feels like being asked to translate a language you've never spoken: alexithymia creates a disconnect between high physiological arousal and low self-reported emotional experience.

Read that again. Your body is feeling everything. Your heart rate is elevated. Your cortisol is high. Your muscles are tense. But the circuit between your body and your conscious awareness has been severed. You are physiologically screaming and psychologically silent. That's not strength. That's a severed wire.

And the cost is staggering: suppressive emotion regulation strategies are linked to higher suicidal ideation. The "suck it up" culture isn't just emotionally damaging — it is a measurable risk factor. Every time you push the feelings down, the pressure in the system increases.

The numbness you feel is not an absence. It is a profound act of self-preservation. It is your body protecting you from a pain it believes you cannot survive.

The Lie of the Faulty Power Company

The culture of toxic masculinity is the negligent power company that sold you a bill of goods. It told you strength was the ability to suppress every power surge, to ignore every flickering light, to pretend your grid had an infinite capacity. That "suck it up" culture is a direct, physiological pathway to a system-wide blackout. The numbness you feel is the predictable, biological consequence of following the power company's dangerous advice.

Restoring Power: One Circuit at a Time

Your mission is not to "get in touch with your feelings." That's bulls*hit. Your mission is to become the master electrician for your own nervous system. And the research gives us the entry point: interoception — the sense of the body's internal state — is the physiological basis for emotion.

Before you can name what you feel, you have to learn to notice what your body is doing. This is the reconnection protocol:

  • Start with the body, not the feelings. When your wife asks "What are you feeling?" and the answer is "nothing," try: "My jaw is tight. My chest feels heavy. My hands are cold." These are body signals. They are data. They are the first flickers of power coming back online.
  • Use bottom-up tools. Research confirms: body-based (bottom-up) therapies are essential, as cognition-oriented therapies alone may be insufficient, particularly for trauma. You can't think your way back to feeling. You have to rebuild the circuit from the ground up.
  • Titrate. You don't restore power to a blacked-out grid by slamming the main breaker back on. You restore it one circuit at a time. Feel your feet on the floor. Notice one sensation. Stay with it for 10 seconds. That's enough for today.

It's about system calibration, not emotional drama. It's about true trauma recovery. Read about bottom-up therapy, explore the science of your nervous system, or when you're ready to inspect the equipment: Start the restoration →


Part of: Trauma Recovery → | Related: Bottom-Up Therapy · Polyvagal Theory