| ⚡ Quick Answer The Polyvagal Theory, developed by neuroscientist Dr. Stephen Porges, proposes that the autonomic nervous system has three hierarchical states, not two. The ventral vagal state supports safety, connection, and social engagement. The sympathetic state mobilises the body for fight or flight. The dorsal vagal state produces shutdown, immobilisation, and dissociation. These states are activated automatically based on the nervous system’s continuous assessment of safety, a process Porges calls neuroception. The theory has transformed how clinicians understand trauma, attachment, emotional regulation, and why relationships are central to healing. |
Before 1994, the standard model of the autonomic nervous system described two states: sympathetic activation (fight or flight) and parasympathetic activation (rest and digest). This two-part model was taught in every medical school, referenced in every psychology textbook, and used as the framework for understanding stress, anxiety, and trauma.
Then, Dr. Stephen Porges published a paper proposing something that fundamentally changed how we understand the nervous system, human connection, and the biology of trauma.
He proposed that the autonomic nervous system does not have two states. It has three and understanding that third state, and the precise mechanism by which the nervous system chooses between them, explains almost everything about why you react the way you do under stress, why certain relationships heal you, and others exhaust you, and why trauma recovery requires far more than willpower or cognitive insight.
This is the Polyvagal Theory, and it is the theoretical foundation underlying everything this site covers about trauma responses, emotional regulation, and human behaviour.
The Three Nervous System States
Porges identified three distinct circuits of the autonomic nervous system, arranged in a hierarchy from evolutionarily newest (most sophisticated) to oldest (most primitive). Under threat, the nervous system moves down this hierarchy, from the most sophisticated response available to the most primitive, depending on what the situation requires.
State 1: Ventral Vagal, Safe and Social
| Ventral Vagal State Evolutionary age: Newest, unique to mammals Primary function: Social engagement and connection Body state: Calm, regulated, present Facial expression: Animated, responsive, making natural eye contact Voice: Melodic, warm, with natural rhythm and variation Capacity: Access to full cognitive function, language, creativity, empathy Felt experience: Safe, grounded, connected, clear |
The ventral vagal state is mediated by the ventral branch of the vagus nerve, the body’s longest cranial nerve, running from the brainstem to the abdomen and influencing the heart, lungs, and face. When this circuit is active, it produces what Porges calls the social engagement system: the ability to read and broadcast social cues, to modulate vocal prosody, to make meaningful eye contact, to listen and respond with genuine attention.
In this state, you can think clearly. You can access nuance, empathy, creativity, and humour. Your digestion is working. Your immune system is functioning. Your heart rate is variable and responsive. You feel safe in your own body, and you can genuinely connect with other people.
This is the state that relationships, creativity, play, and genuine learning require. It is also the state that trauma consistently disrupts, and that healing, over time, gradually restores.
State 2: Sympathetic, Fight or Flight
| Sympathetic Activation State Evolutionary age: Older, shared with all vertebrates Primary function: Mobilisation against the threat Body state: Energised, tense, ready for action Facial expression: Narrowed, alert, scanning Voice: Higher-pitched, faster, pressured Capacity: Focused on survival; complex cognition and social engagement were reduced Felt experience: Anxious, angry, restless, urgent |
When the nervous system detects a threat and determines that the ventral vagal state’s social tools are insufficient to manage it, it recruits the sympathetic nervous system. Adrenaline and cortisol flood the body. Heart rate increases. Breathing quickens. Muscles mobilise. Blood flow is diverted from digestion and the prefrontal cortex toward the large muscle groups needed for running or fighting.
In this state, the social engagement system is partially offline. Reading subtle facial expressions becomes harder. Listening deeply becomes harder. Accessing empathy, creativity, and nuanced language becomes harder. The nervous system is focused on survival, and survival, in this state, means either confrontation or escape.
Chronic sympathetic activation, being stuck in this state even when no acute threat is present, is associated with anxiety disorders, hypervigilance, chronic pain, insomnia, and the fight-or-flight trauma response patterns described elsewhere on this site.
State 3: Dorsal Vagal, Shutdown and Collapse
| Dorsal Vagal State Evolutionary age: Oldest, shared with all vertebrates, including reptiles Primary function: Conservation and immobilisation under extreme threat Body state: Heavy, slow, collapsed, numb Facial expression: Flat, minimal movement, unfocused gaze Voice: Flat, monotone, slowed Capacity: Severely reduced; dissociation common Felt Experience: Numb, foggy, disconnected, hopeless, shut down |
When the nervous system determines that neither fight nor flight is viable, when the threat is perceived as inescapable and overwhelming, it recruits the dorsal vagal branch: the oldest and most primitive circuit of the autonomic nervous system, shared with reptiles and amphibians.
This is the shutdown response. In animals, it produces tonic immobility, playing dead. In humans, it produces dissociation, emotional numbness, a collapse of energy and motivation, the inability to speak or act, and a profound disconnection from both body and present reality.
This is the freeze and collapse response described in detail on this site. It is not passivity or weakness. It is the nervous system’s last-resort survival strategy, the thing it does when everything else has failed or is unavailable.
Neuroception: How Your Nervous System Decides Which State to Enter
The key concept linking the three states is what Porges calls neuroception, the continuous, automatic process by which the nervous system scans the environment for safety or threat cues and adjusts the nervous system state accordingly.
Crucially, neuroception happens below the level of conscious awareness. Before you have consciously processed a situation, your nervous system has already assessed it. The shift between states is not something you decide. It is something your nervous system does on your behalf, based on the pattern-matching it has developed over your entire life history.
This is why you cannot simply think your way out of a threat response. The neuroception system that is triggering the response is not accessible to conscious reasoning. You can build top-down regulatory capacity, using the prefrontal cortex to modulate the threat response, but you cannot reason with the neuroception system directly. This has profound implications for how we approach trauma healing.
| 📖 Key Insight Neuroception can be accurate or inaccurate. It is accurate when it correctly identifies a genuine safety or a genuine threat. It is inaccurate, and this is the central problem in trauma: when the nervous system pattern-matches present safety cues to past threat experiences and responds to the past rather than the present. A raised voice that is safe triggers the same state as one that was dangerous. A moment of intimacy that could be nourishing triggers the same shutdown as intimacy that was once harmful. The nervous system is doing its best with an outdated map. |
The Social Engagement System
One of Porges’ most important contributions is the identification of the social engagement system, a set of neural circuits linking the ventral vagal nerve to the muscles of the face and head. This system includes the circuits governing:
- The muscles of facial expression allow the face to broadcast and read emotional states
- The muscles of the middle ear, tuning hearing toward the frequency range of human voice (and away from lower-frequency environmental sounds associated with predators)
- The muscles of the larynx and pharynx give voice its prosodic, melodic quality
- The muscles of the eyelids and gaze direction enable meaningful eye contact
When the ventral vagal circuit is active, all of these components work together to create the conditions for genuine social connection. When the sympathetic or dorsal vagal circuits are dominant, the social engagement system is partially or fully offline, making the face flatter, the voice more monotone, the hearing less able to filter human voice from background sound, and eye contact harder to sustain.
This has profound implications. It means that trauma survivors in sympathetic or dorsal states may literally struggle to pick up the warm social cues that would help regulate their nervous system, because the system designed to read those cues is suppressed. The safety signals that could help are harder to receive.
How Polyvagal Theory Explains the Trauma Responses
| Trauma Response | Polyvagal State | Activation Trigger |
| Fight | Sympathetic mobilisation | Threat perceived as manageable through confrontation |
| Flight | Sympathetic mobilisation | Threat perceived as manageable through escape |
| Freeze (tonic immobility) | Dorsal vagal shutdown | Threat perceived as inescapable; fight/flight failed or unavailable |
| Fawn | Complex: ventral + sympathetic | Threat perceived as relational; social engagement deployed as appeasement |
| Emotional flashback | Sympathetic or dorsal triggered by past-matched neuroception | Present stimulus matched to past threat template |
What Polyvagal Theory Means for Healing
The practical implications of Polyvagal Theory for trauma healing are significant and specific:
1. Safety is the Prerequisite, Not the Goal
Trauma processing cannot happen from a sympathetic or dorsal vagal state. The nervous system must be in or near the ventral vagal window before therapeutic work, or any meaningful self-reflection, can proceed. This is why effective trauma therapy begins with safety and stabilisation, not with revisiting traumatic material.
2. The Body Must Be Addressed, Not Just the Mind
Because the nervous system state is physiological, not cognitive, changing it requires physiological interventions. Breathwork, movement, vocalization, cold water, grounding, and body-based therapeutic approaches all work by sending signals through the bottom-up pathway (brain-body) that shift the nervous system state. Cognitive insight alone cannot reach the neuroception system that is generating the state.
3. Relationships Are Therapeutic
The social engagement system is the mechanism of co-regulation. A regulated therapist, a safe partner, a consistent friend, their nervous system’s ventral vagal state is transmitted through voice, face, and presence to the survivor’s nervous system. This is not a metaphor. It is the biological healing pathway that the Polyvagal Theory reveals. Social connection is not a supplement to nervous system healing. It is one of its primary mechanisms.
4. Neuroception Can Be Recalibrated
The inaccurate neuroception that mistakes present safety for past danger can be gradually recalibrated through accumulated corrective experiences. Repeated experiences of being in a relationship with a genuinely safe person, surviving the vulnerability, and finding it is not followed by danger, begin to update the nervous system’s threat model. This process takes time and repetition. But it is the foundation of lasting change.
Applying Polyvagal Theory to Daily Life
You do not need to be in therapy to begin applying this framework. Some foundational practices:
- Identify your state before reacting: When you notice yourself being reactive, ask: ‘Am I in sympathetic (anxious, angry, restless) or dorsal (numb, shut down, foggy)?’ Naming the state is the first step toward shifting it.
- Work with your nervous system, not against it: Each state has physiological tools. Sympathetic activation responds to movement, cold, slow exhales, and the physical discharge of mobilised energy. Dorsal activation responds to gentle movement, warmth, humming, and gradual grounding. Do not try to force the shift; work with the state’s physiology.
- Seek ventral vagal experiences intentionally: Activities, environments, and people that reliably return you to the ventral vagal state are not luxuries. They are maintenance. Identify them deliberately and protect time for them.
- Understand your neuroception triggers: Notice what consistently moves you out of ventral vagal. Specific tones? Certain dynamics? Particular environments? Mapping your triggers is mapping your neuroception, and it allows you to prepare, rather than be ambushed.
- Build your capacity for safe social engagement: Every time you allow yourself to be genuinely present with a safe person, receive their warmth, and not immediately move to manage or monitor, you are exercising the ventral vagal system and building its capacity.
| 🔗 Everything This Theory Explains, Our Articles → Hyper Independence: Why Self-Reliance Becomes Survival → Why You Feel Guilty Saying No (Fawn Response) → Signs of the Fawn Response → The Fawn Response at Work → Your Dominant Trauma Response → The Flight Response Trauma → Why You Overreact to Small Things (Emotional Flashbacks) → The Freeze Response Trauma → Why Certain People Drain Your Nervous System → Co-Regulation: Why You Cannot Heal Alone |
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Polyvagal Theory scientifically accepted?
Polyvagal Theory has been highly influential in clinical psychology and trauma therapy, and its core framework, particularly the importance of the social engagement system and the hierarchical organisation of the autonomic nervous system, has broad support. Some specific claims have been debated in the neuroscience literature, particularly regarding the precise anatomy of the dorsal vagal pathway. The clinical utility of the framework, however, has been consistently supported by research in trauma treatment, and it informs several evidence-based therapeutic modalities.
Who developed the Polyvagal Theory?
Stephen Porges, PhD, is a professor of psychiatry at the University of North Carolina and a Distinguished University Scientist at Indiana University. He first presented the theory in his 1994 presidential address to the Society for Psychophysiological Research. He has since developed and refined it across multiple papers and two books: The Polyvagal Theory (2011) and The Pocket Guide to Polyvagal Theory (2017).
How does Polyvagal Theory relate to EMDR and somatic therapy?
Both EMDR and somatic therapy incorporate Polyvagal Theory explicitly. They work with the principle that trauma must be processed from within the window of tolerance, that is, with enough ventral vagal access that the person can be present to the traumatic material without being overwhelmed by it. EMDR’s bilateral stimulation and somatic therapy’s body-based interventions both work partly by engaging the bottom-up nervous system pathways that the Polyvagal Theory identifies as central to state regulation.
Can I change my baseline nervous system state?
Yes, the nervous system is neuroplastic. The baseline state it habitually settles into can shift, over time and with consistent practice, toward greater ventral vagal access. This happens through: accumulated corrective relational experiences, consistent nervous system regulation practices (breathwork, movement, somatic work), therapeutic processing of stored traumatic material that is currently driving the baseline toward threat-readiness, and the gradual recalibration of neuroception through safe repeated relational experiences.
Does the Polyvagal Theory explain anxiety?
Largely, yes. Anxiety, as a physiological state of sustained sympathetic activation without a clear present threat, is explained by Polyvagal Theory as a neuroception error: the nervous system is assessing the environment as threatening when it is not, based on pattern-matching to past experiences. The theory also explains why anxiety is so resistant to purely cognitive intervention, because the neuroception system generating it is below the reach of conscious reasoning and requires physiological and relational approaches alongside cognitive ones.




