Episode Details
Back to Episodes#335 What It Looks Like to Stay in the Room Without Losing Yourself
Description
If you've ever walked into a hard conversation already braced for impact — this episode is about what happens in the sixty seconds before. Presence in conflict isn't about staying calm. It's about who is in the driver's seat.
Most people prepare for conflict by preparing their words. They run through scenarios. They anticipate responses. They build a case. And then the conversation begins — and the nervous system, which has been on alert since the preparation started, takes over before the identity can get there.
Staying present in conflict is not about staying calm. Calm is a feeling. Presence is a practice. You can be fully activated — heart rate elevated, body clearly aware that this conversation matters — and still be present. What presence requires is not the absence of activation. It requires that identity, rather than threat response, is in the driver's seat. And getting identity into the driver's seat is a somatic practice before it is a verbal one. It starts in the body, before the words, before the room.
This episode is the Reinforcement stage of Week 12 on conflict. Reinforcement here means practicing a new way of being inside a hard conversation — not through technique or script, but through the intentional, pre-conversation regulation that allows identity to lead rather than threat response to drive.
In this episode you'll recognize:
Why staying present in conflict is not the same as staying calm — and why that distinction changes everything about what you're trying to do
- How anticipation of conflict activates the nervous system before the conversation even begins — and what that costs
- The pre-conversation practice of prayer, breath, and conscious body relaxation — and why sixty seconds before the call changes what happens inside it
- Why presence is a somatic practice before it is a verbal one
- What it means to still be in the practice — not as failure, but as faithfulness
Today's Micro Recalibration:
Before your next hard conversation, take sixty seconds. Pray or orient — remember who you are before the room can tell you otherwise. Breathe intentionally, signaling to your nervous system that you are not under threat. And consciously relax your body — find where you are holding and release the bracing before the conversation begins.
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