Reader question:
Please explain this sentence: You have my attention, like a deer in headlights.
My comments:
Simply put, he/she is all yours – you’ve got all their attention.
Headlights refer to the shiny flashlight of the two big front lights of a vehicle, car or truck.
A “deer in headlights” refers to the deer caught in such a situation.
It is a terrible position as a matter of fact for the animal to be in. Instead of running straight away, the animal is often frozen in its tracks, dumbfounded, staring right at the headlights and unable to move.
The deer, you see, is blinded by the dazzling light.
Deer, oh deer.
As an idiom, on the other hand, to say someone is like a deer in headlights is to point out that they’re unable to make a move due to shock, confusion or fear.
In the top example, though, I don’t think there’s no fear or confusion involved. You simply have their full attention. Their eyes are on you, you alone. And their attention is fixed and undivided.
“Like a deer in headlights” also suggests that if the attention is too much, they are caught in the moment and do not know how to respond.
And yet, for better or worse, you’d better keep the light shining.
For if the light goes off, the deer, too, may soon be gone, galloping into the woods.
Alright, here are media examples of deer caught in headlights, both literally and literarily:
1. A scared deer that stood frozen in it tracks in the middle of a highway was rescued by a Michigan police officer who picked up the young doe and carried her off the road.
The stunned deer stood motionless in the headlights of oncoming cars for thirty minutes, reports KVUE, when the deputy sheriff approached the scared animal.
The officer carried the deer to the side of the road where it eventually calmed down enough to dash away into the woods.
- Michigan police officer rescues stunned deer, DigitalJournal.com, November 16, 2011.
2. Like the proverbial deer caught in the headlights, people also freeze in response to fear.
A new study shows that the heart rate of men slows and movement ceases when they perceive a threat; merely viewing a disturbing image may be enough to induce this fear response.
Researchers say freezing or standing still when a threat is detected is a natural defensive reaction. This automatic behavior allows the prey to remain unnoticed by a potential predator.
- Humans Retain Animal-Like Reaction of Standing Still When Threatened, WebMD.com, June 10, 2005.
3. The U.S. soldier accused of carrying out a mass killing of Afghan civilians earlier this week is currently being returned to the United States, according to officials in Kuwait where the Army sergeant was first taken after leaving Afghanistan.
A U.S. official confirmed the soldier is en route to a prison in Leavenworth, Kansas, and is expected to be back on American soil as early as Friday.
Seattle attorney John Henry Browne announced Thursday he’s been hired by the soldier’s family to represent him. The suspect was based at Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington.
“He is in shock, kind of like a deer in headlights at the moment,” Browne said Friday morning. “I told him not to talk about the allegations at all, so I cannot tell you how he is responding because I told him not to talk about it.”
The soldier is suspected of going on a shooting rampage in villages near his base in southern Afghanistan early Sunday, killing nine children and seven other civilians and then burning some of their bodies. The shooting, which followed a controversial Quran-burning incident involving U.S. soldiers, outraged Afghan officials and raised concerns that the U.S.-led effort in Afghanistan could falter.
- JBLM soldier ‘in shock, kind of like a deer in headlights,’ says lawyer, King5.com, March 15, 2017.
About the author:
Zhang Xin is Trainer at chinadaily.com.cn. He has been with China Daily since 1988, when he graduated from Beijing Foreign Studies University. Write him at: zhangxin@chinadaily.com.cn, or raise a question for potential use in a future column.
上一篇: Victory lap?
【课堂新坐标】2017届高考英语(通用版)二轮复习短文改错专题训练:训练2 短文改错(Ⅱ)(含解析)
【课堂新坐标】2017届高考英语(通用版)二轮复习短文改错专题训练:考法2 句法错误(含解析)
【课堂新坐标】2017届高考英语(通用版)二轮复习短文改错专题训练:模式3 错一词(含解析)
【课堂新坐标】2017届高考英语(通用版)二轮复习书面表达专题训练:技法3 丰富充实的细节信息(含解析)
2016年12月大学英语四级真题解析—作文参考范文之工作还是创业(文都教育版)
【课堂新坐标】2017届高考英语(通用版)二轮复习书面表达专题训练:训练1 书信、邮件+叙事类记叙文(含解析)
2016年12月大学英语四级考试真题作文范文及解析:工作or考研(文都教育版)
2017年高考英语二轮复习精品资料:专题14 阅读理解(教学案)(原卷版)
【课堂新坐标】2017届高考英语(通用版)二轮复习书面表达专题训练:技法2 引人入胜的开篇语(含解析)
2016年12月英语四级作文真题:试卷三(新东方版)
【课堂新坐标】2017届高考英语(通用版)二轮复习书面表达专题训练:技法4 巧妙的过渡连贯的衔接(含解析)
【课堂新坐标】2017届高考英语(通用版)二轮复习书面表达专题训练:训练4 书信、邮件+议论文(Ⅱ)(含解析)
【课堂新坐标】2017届高考英语(通用版)二轮复习书面表达专题训练:Ⅱ卷强化增分练 训练1(含解析)
Yes, China, there really is a Santa Claus
【课堂新坐标】2017届高考英语(通用版)二轮复习短文改错专题训练:考法3 行文逻辑错误(含解析)
【课堂新坐标】2017届高考英语(通用版)二轮复习短文改错专题训练:模式2 多一词(含解析)
“超现实”成韦氏词典2016年度词汇
2017年高考英语二轮复习精品资料:专题16 书面表达(教学案)(教师版)
2016年12月英语四级作文真题&答案:试卷三 就业还是考研/读书?
【课堂新坐标】2017届高考英语(通用版)二轮复习短文改错专题训练:考法1 词法错误(含解析)
2016年12月英语四级考试真题--作文范文及解析之选择国企还是合资企业(文都教育版)
【课堂新坐标】2017届高考英语(通用版)二轮复习书面表达专题训练:训练3 书信、邮件+议论文(Ⅰ)(含解析)
【课堂新坐标】2017届高考英语(通用版)二轮复习短文改错专题训练:训练1 短文改错(Ⅰ)(含解析)
2017年高考英语二轮复习精品资料:专题16 书面表达(押题专练)(原卷版)
2017年高考英语二轮复习精品资料:专题15 完形填空(教学案)(原卷版)
【课堂新坐标】2017届高考英语(通用版)二轮复习书面表达专题训练:训练2 书信、邮件+写人类记叙文(含解析)
2016年12月英语四级作文真题&答案:试卷三(新东方版)
【课堂新坐标】2017届高考英语(通用版)二轮复习书面表达专题训练:Ⅱ卷强化增分练 训练4(含解析)
她的神秘圣诞老人居然是比尔•盖茨!!!
【课堂新坐标】2017届高考英语(通用版)二轮复习完形填空专题训练:技法3 利用词语习惯搭配解题(含解析)