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Dear people, even if the molester is an absolute stranger, a child can't quite "flee" from and definitely can't "fight" a big grown man! I was molested by a stranger on the top of an empty apartment building at 11 years of age - I had nowhere to flee, should I have fought him???
(thank you! I really don't want to step on toes but I'm genuinely curious about freezing and non-sexual assaults)
There may be an involuntary, reflexive, physiological basis for this immobility. A long documented physiological, involuntary, reflexive response which occurs in many animal species is 'tonic immobility' (Suarez & Gallup 1976). This is an unlearned state of profound motor inhibition typically elicited by a high fear situation that involves threat and/or restraint. After some struggling, a catatonic-like posture ensues. Vocalisation stops, tremors occur, and there are periods of eye closure. Heart rate decreases while body temperature and respiration increase (Suarez & Gallup 1976). Tonic immobility has seldom been studied in humans (Crawford 1977), but Suarez and Gallup (1976) proposed that freezing reactions during rape may be an instance of tonic immobility in human beings. This possibility is supported by victim self-reports such as, 'I felt faint, trembling and cold . . . I went limp' (Burgess & Holmstrom 1976, p. 416), or feeling '. . . unable to do anything . . . even move my legs (Rose 1986, p. 819).