Use situation‑behavior‑impact to anchor specifics, then add a curiosity question. Instead of verdicts, invite a story: What was happening on your side? Pair this with time‑boxed silence. In scenarios, that small invitation uncovers constraints, reveals assumptions, and opens the door to co‑designing a next step.
Status, certainty, autonomy, relatedness, and fairness cues can inflame or soothe. Coach micro‑phrases that restore choice, clarify timelines, and recognize effort without praising personalities. In practice scenes, these tiny adjustments reduce amygdala alarms, letting teams weigh tradeoffs rationally instead of guarding territory or defending pride.
Express observations, feelings, needs, and requests without judgment. Then tie requests to shared goals and concrete commitments. Scenario drills demonstrate how to hold firm on standards while validating emotions, preventing the false choice between compassion and performance, and creating agreements people actually follow.
All Rights Reserved.