This idea - Youβre not lazy, youβre protecting yourselfΒ - hit me really hard while reading, of all things, Emily Nagoskiβs Come As You Are, which turns out to be as much about how brains work and how relationships work as how orgasms work.
In an early part of the book she talks about Fight/Flight/Freeze responses to threatsβthe example she uses is being attacked by a lion. You fight, if you think you can defeat the lion; you run away, if you think you can escape the lion; and when you think thereβs nothing you can do, when you feel the lionβs jaws closing on your neck, you freeze, because dying will hurt less that way. You just stop and go numb and wait for it to be over, because that is the last way to protect any scrap of yourself.
Later in the book, she talks about the brain process that motivates you to pursue incentives, describing it as a little monitor that gauges your progress toward a goal versus the effort youβre expending. If it feels like too little progress is being made you get frustrated, get angry, and, eventually, youβ¦ despair. You stop trying.
You go numb and wait for it to be over, because thatβs the only way left to protect yourself.
So it occurred to me that these are basically the same thingβwhen facing a difficult task, where failure feels like a Threat, you can get frustrated and fight it outβINCREASE DOING THE THING until you get where youβre going. Or you can fleeβtry to solve the problem some other way than straight on, changing your goal, changing your approach, whatever. Fight or flight.
But both of those only apply when you think the problem is solvable, right? If the problem isnβt solvable, then you freeze. You despair.Β
And if youβre one of those Smart Kids (Smart Girls, especially) who was praised for being smart so that all tasks in the world came to be divided between Ooh This Is Easy and I DONβT KNOW IF I CAN DO THAT AND IF I FUCK UP I WILL DIE, thenβ¦ itβs pretty easy to see how you lose the frustration/anger stage of working toward a goal, because your brain goes straight to freeze/despair every time. Things are easy and routine or they are straight up impossible.
So, you know, any time you manage to pull yourself up and give that lion a smack on the nose, or go stumbling away from it instead of just falling down like a fainting goat as soon as you spot it on the horizon, give yourself a gold star from me. Because this is some deeply wired survival-brain stuff. Even if logically you know that that term paper is not a lion, it really is like that sometimes.