Clarity Without Conflict
We avoid hard conversations because we fear conflict. But most people don’t need confrontation — they need clarity. When you speak simply and calmly, friction drops and cooperation rises.
Regulate First, Then Relate
A sample exercise: Before talking, steady your nervous system: a few slow breaths, a short walk, a glass of water. Calm body, clearer words.
Decide Your Intention
Pick one goal: align on expectations, reset a timeline, or repair a misunderstanding. One intention keeps the conversation clean.
Keep to One Topic
Don’t stack issues. One conversation, one change. It’s easier for both of you to feel heard when you stay on topic.
Use “I” Language
- “I feel stretched when meetings run late; can we end five minutes early?”
- Instead of: “You always run over.”
Make It Collaborative
Invite solutions: “What would make this work for both of us?” People support what they help create.
Agree on the Observable
Anchor to specifics: time, scope, deadline, response window. Vague agreements create future conflict.
When Tension Rises
- Lower your voice, slow your pace.
- Take a short pause: “Let’s pick this up after lunch.”
- Return to intention: “I want this to work well for both of us.”
Repair and Re-enter
If something lands badly, own your part: “I didn’t express that well. Here’s what I meant.” Repair builds trust.