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How can you avoid a ‘Will Smith moment’? Just practise the pause

Hold the feeling of being emotionally threatened until you are calm enough to respond in a measured way

June 30, 2022 11:30
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US actor Will Smith (R) slaps US actor Chris Rock onstage during the 94th Oscars at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, California on March 27, 2022. (Photo by Robyn Beck / AFP) (Photo by ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images)
2 min read

A few weeks ago, in our clinic, we experienced what we have now renamed a “Will Smith moment”. Luckily for all of us, it did not end with a slap. Family and couples’ therapy is the scariest therapy to attend because when there are other family members in the room you never know what someone else is going to say. Often, while working on openness or communication, one person says something that another person experiences as critical, judgmental or blaming. The impact on the recipient is palpable. They may tense up, go red or turn away. Occasionally they leave the room. The triggers vary from obvious insults or misplaced jokes to comments that are subtle, context-driven or uttered in a barely audible sarcastic tone.

There are always at least two sides to these incidents. One needs to re-examine their words and take ownership for any offence suggested; intended or otherwise. The other, who felt insulted, may need to think not only about whether they assumed a meaning that was never intended, but also about the way that they reacted.

When we experience something as threatening or are emotionally triggered, we have a powerful physiological response in which adrenaline pumps through our body and our neurological flight or fight defence mechanisms are activated. This response is automatic and momentarily precludes any thoughtfulness or consideration as we are hard-wired to react by protecting ourselves and restoring safety when threatened. Yet humans are different from animals in that we have a large, complex prefrontal cortex capable of sophisticated thinking, personality development and impulse control.

Thanks to neuroplasticity, the more we exercise our ability to hold our intense emotional triggers rather than allow them to dictate our behaviours, the better our capacity for emotional regulation. In some ways, holding the feeling of being emotionally threatened or provoked until you are calm enough to respond in a thoughtful, measured way, is the key to relational success. Because it is only when we can focus less on being defensive and safety-seeking that we can truly concentrate on another and listen attentively enough to truly empathise.