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transportphile
November 25th, 2011, 06:19 PM
In school today I was in trouble with the deputy head and he told me I was on detention and asked me if i understood so I said yes and at the absoloute top of his voice he screamed "GOOD" right in my face.

It scared the absouloute shit out of me and i really mean it was scary. After that though I started feeling faint, light headed, breathing heavy,my legs were jelly,hands shaking and my speech was slurred.

I wonder what that could be and if it culd affect me because I am still shaking now.

Dimitri
November 25th, 2011, 08:08 PM
It is called the "Fight or Flight" response, you were wanting to fly, run away because you were afraid and your adrenaline was pumping.

Although why you shell feel these emotions I would just suggest you relax and take a nap.

Josiah7
November 26th, 2011, 12:24 AM
It is called the "Fight or Flight" response, you were wanting to fly, run away because you were afraid and your adrenaline was pumping.

Although why you shell feel these emotions I would just suggest you relax and take a nap.

Yeah what he said - It was mostly cause you were afraid quite quickly, and being yelled at by teachers does that to many kids.

FuzzyLittleNightmare
November 26th, 2011, 01:31 PM
Techincally, neurologically speaking, there is no such thing as the "Fight or Flight" response. It is simply Flight. if your adrenaline was really pumping, you would fight to get away from a situation but then you would run, not stay and fight. But thats just me being specific lol.

If your body is still shaky, the adrenaline simply has not left your system yet. What doctors will say is to relax and just wait for it to leave your system, and though this does work a little, the problem is the adrenaline can get trapped in your muscles and cause sore aches the next day (kind of like when you do loads of excersize and then don't give your muscles a chance to cool down). The best thing to do is go for a run. Start with a light log and then burst into a fast sprint for as long as you can. Then jog for a while before slowing to a walk so your muscles cool down after the spritn. The adrenaline will leave your muscles and enter your bloodstream that way, meaning you will get rid of it much more quickly.

tHe_Jester1080
November 29th, 2011, 10:28 PM
the actual hormone is epinephrine, which makes you stronger, have more stamina, raises heart rate and pressure, and generally makes you numb to pain. your body will release when you are severly hurt, scared to hell, cold, and many other situations,and when asked doctors will call it "FIGHT OR FLIGHT" so ya, lol