Episode Details
Back to Episodes#333 Why You Either Shut Down or Escalate — And What That's Actually Protecting
Description
If you hold it together at work and fall apart at home — or go completely quiet instead — this episode names why. Your conflict response isn't a character flaw. It's a protection strategy. And it has a story worth understanding.
Most high-capacity humans have two different conflict responses — and most of them have never noticed that which one shows up depends heavily on where they are and who's watching. At work, with clients, in professional settings where the consequences are visible and external, composure is maintained. Words are chosen carefully. The politics are read. The response is managed. And then they arrive home — to the relationship that is safest, the people who will still be there regardless of how the conversation goes — and the reserves are thin. What comes out is the less regulated version. The one that gets big. Or the one that goes completely quiet. And the shame that follows is the belief that this is who they really are.
It isn't. It's who they are when they're depleted
This episode is the Release stage of Week 12 on conflict. Before anything can shift in how we navigate conflict, we have to release the shame around our current response — not by excusing it, but by understanding exactly where it came from and what it has always been protecting.
In this episode you'll recognize:
- Why composure is a resource — and what it means when it runs out before you get home
- The two survival responses to conflict (escalation and withdrawal) and the protection each one offers
- Why getting big hurts others, and getting small hurts yourself — and why neither is a final verdict
- How the distribution of your conflict response across relationships is itself information
- The difference between permission and safety — and why the people who feel safest often receive the least regulated version of you
Today's Micro Recalibration:
Think about the relationship that receives your least regulated conflict response. Instead of bringing shame to that — bring curiosity. Ask: what is this response protecting? And is that protection still necessary, or is it a pattern I learned in a different relational context that I'm still running here?
This is EP 333 · Week 12 · Season 4 of The Recalibration with Julie Holly.
Explore Identity-Level Recalibration
→ Schedule a conversation with Julie to see if The Recalibration is a fit for you
→ Learn about The Recalibration Cohort
→ Join the next Friday Recalibration Live experience
→ Take your listening deeper! Subscribe to The Weekly Recalibration Companion to receive reflections and extensions to each week's podcast episodes.
→ Follow Julie Holly on LinkedIn for more recalibration insights
→ Download the Misalignment Audit
→ Subscribe to the weekly newsletter
→ Books to read (Tidy categories on Amazon- I've read/listened to each recommended title.)
...