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we discuss this lets look at comparable displays in other animals
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PROGRAM PEACE Self Care Exercises to Reprogram Your Mind and Body
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Submissive and Dominant Displays in Animals
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Dominant and submissive displays occur in almost all animal species from insects to fish to the
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great apes Threatening intimidation displays are meant to impress making the animal bigger
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or emphasizing its physical dominance They involve bristling hair ruffling feathers raising skin
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folds baring teeth displaying horns emitting loud sounds making quick and powerful
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movements and adopting exaggerated postures
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When a western silverback gorilla wants to intimidate a rival he will start throwing objects
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pounding his chest kicking his legs and running sideways when approached The fur of
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dominant chimps stands on end to make them appear larger and they walk with exaggerated
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weight They gallop run in circles hit things perform somersaults and produce a wide range of
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loud barking and hooting vocalizations
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Dominant lizards perform pushups bobbing their heads up and down displaying their
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muscles and athletic prowess for others to see This display shows off the bright coloring on
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their throats and sides and indicates that they are in prime physical condition Many male
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lizards raise themselves on their legs and arch their backs to signify territorial dominance And
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remember lizards are not utterly distinct from people Three hundred million years ago before
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mammals our ancestors were reptiles crawling the earth We have inherited many of our most
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primal instincts and social signalsas well as the structure of the oldest and most reflexive
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parts of our brainsfrom these miniature dragons This inheritance is the reason that the
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dominance displays of modern reptiles seem so familiar
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illustration A Common lizard B Tyrannosaurus rex C Iguana
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Submissive displays on the other hand usually make the animal look smaller and
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weaker They involve bowing cowering stooping shaking and exerting efforts to minimize the
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appearance of physical assets Some animals have bizarre ritualistic signals as with some lizard
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species that display submission by raising a front leg and waving it in a slow circular motion
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Like a loyal subject genuflecting in the presence of royalty chimpanzees with poor fighting
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records cower immediately during a confrontation They shrink down and whimper They may
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vomit their legs shake and their posture collapses
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For the most part these displays are hardwired For example young male rhesus monkeys
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that have never been exposed to adult males will give subordination displays instinctively when
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they first encounter them They involuntarily bow the head and adopt a bentover posture We
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dont realize it or think about it but our subordination displays are similarly instinctive
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Chapter Optimal Quality of Life Training
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Submissive Displays in Apes Dominant Displays in Apes
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Withdrawal flight crouching screaming
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gaze aversion ceasing activity freezing
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grimacing or grinning peeking trembling
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pulling the limbs close to the body moving
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out of the way of dominant members and
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startling in response to their actions
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Openmouthed threat nostril flare direct
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stare thumping the ground lunging tense
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mouth strutting mounting chasing
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yawning genital display chestbeating
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sprawling gnashing teeth barkingroaring
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destroying vegetation breaking up fights
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dragging branches drumming on trees
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Table Common Hierarchical Displays Used by Chimps
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Bonobos Gorillas Orangutans and Gibbons
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Too often being fair fun and friendly toward others involves suboptimal displays This is
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because the neural circuits responsible for submissive behavior were repurposed by natural
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selection to help us get along Just as adult pair bonding in mammals evolved from the same
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brain machinery that was initially responsible for creating the motherinfant bond so many of
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our affiliative instincts evolved from submissive displays
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Involuntary Submissive Displays are the Source of Our Stress
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Ordinarily we dont use optimal postures because we are afraid they will be threatening to
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others This is why for instance we rarely stand completely straight or lift our hands above our
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heads This is unfortunate because when authentic and combined with positive affect
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dominant displays can be calming and reassuring to people around us Any good leader uses
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them to this effect But because most of us never learn to use dominant displays in positive
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ways we grow up associating them with bad experiences For instance classmates might have
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seen us walking with our heads up taken offense and tried to intimidate us into adopting a
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compliant headdown posture Experiences like these are the reason that performing optimal
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displays makes you breathe shallowly and become tense
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The table below lists submissive suboptimal displays and their dominant optimal
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counterparts These are just a handful of those considered in this book but they are a good
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start While reading the table below make a mental determination of which displays you use
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most and to what extent Think about how you employ these displays in different scenarios
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such as when you are by yourself at home when you are with friends and when you are
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in public
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PROGRAM PEACE Self Care Exercises to Reprogram Your Mind and Body
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Submissive Display Dominant Display
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Breathing short quick shallow uneven
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and through the mouth
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Breathing long slow deep smooth and
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through the nose
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Muscles tense and strained
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Muscles calm and relaxed
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Eyes looking down
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Eyes looking up
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Darting gaze
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Eyes capable of holding a prolonged gaze
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Minimized eye contact
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Steady eye contact
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Eyes blinking
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Eyes unblinking
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Eyes squinting
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Eyes wide open
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Raised eyebrows
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Relaxed eyebrows
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Face tense and wincing
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Face completely relaxed
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Jaw and chin tense
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Jaw and chin completely relaxed
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Trembling movement
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Smooth steady movement
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Flinching and startling
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Zero flinch or startle
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Subsets and Splits
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