Your default habit is FIGHT
In Relationship
Dynamics Protest & Pressure
In response to hurt or friction, you turn up the temperature, point out faults of your partner, often escalating rather than resolving.
Typical Habits or Behaviors
Arguing to be heard, to be right, criticism, blame, name-calling, interrupting or dominating conversations.
Impact on the Relationship
Erodes safety and trust, fuels resentment, creates a win/lose dynamic instead of mutual understanding.
Emotional Reactivity
Survival-driven habits that hijack clarity and pull us into the 4F’s threat-protection responses. It’s an automatic human tendency that escalates tension and feeds the disconnection cycle. We act before we’ve named or understood what’s actually happening inside and between us.
Emotional Sobriety
The practiced capacity to pause, feel, understand and choose. We regulate ourselves enough to tell the truth constructively and to turn toward repair of ruptures and/or healthy boundary setting. It’s not weakness nor is it harsh; it’s steady and confident presence aligned with values—honesty, courage, and care. Lasting personal change begins with acceptance of our own habits of emotional reactivity + a plan of action.
Change is Possible
We all do many things right in our relationships. But in some difficult moments, we get emotionally reactive—we pivot into fight, flight, freeze or fawn mode—in ways that unintentionally contribute to conflict.
These moments make us feel worse over time and they erode trust, safety and connection in the relationship. The purpose of this tool isn’t to criticize but empathize. Human beings deserve compassion for their habits of emotional reactivity because these behaviors are so automatic, compulsive and difficult to rein in. But change is possible. Very possible. You can learn to pivot from emotional reactivity to emotional sobriety.
Ready to make positive changes in your emotional-relational life?