Activity Safe and Cool Conversations

How to talk respectfully when emotions run high

Creating emotional safety: Open, honest, and respectful communication increases family bonding and fosters loving relationships. For this to occur, people need to feel emotionally safe with one another. This is especially true in discussing a sensitive topic or talking with teens—who often feel misjudged and emotionally stressed. Fortunately, creating an emotionally safe place only needs three things: a right attitude, improved social skills, and new “scripts” or phrases that can cool a conversation and restore emotional safety. Focus on adjusting your attitudes, memorize the “scripts,” and practice the skills until they come naturally. You’ll see a huge increase in personal satisfaction and bonding.

Right Attitudes

Proven Social Skills

Safe & Cool Scripts

  • Value others as yourself 
  • Desire to understand how others feel and see things
  • Desire to express yourself respectfully as a peacemaker 
  • Develop pure intentions
  • Cease to judge or be critical
  • Be generous instead of selfish 
  • View others with compassion
  • Abandon ill-will; be willing to love
  • Respect others’ boundaries and right to choose differently
  • Desire to speak only truth
  • Believe you could be wrong; freely admit errors
  • Be willing to make amends if you offend
  • Have courage to bring up hard issues in a sensitive and kind way 
  • Feel sorry when you offend
  • Use “LUV-Listening”
  • Talk in “I-Messages”
  • Use positive and kind words
  • Use respectful voice tones and body language
  • Look for and compliment the good
  • Notice others’ body language
  • Notice if the discussion gets tense
  • Notice your own stress and quickly self calm if needed
  • Defuse confrontations with calming statements and questions
  • Avoid throwing any C-Boulders
  • Say hard things in kind ways
  • If misunderstood, patiently clarify your motives and restate what you mean
  • Be tentative with your opinions
  • Avoid getting defensive
  • Apologize quickly for offenses
  • Ask openly for what you want or need
  • Use Mindfulness techniques to calm your brain, help you be non-judgmental, and question your thoughts and “stories”
  • Is this a good time to talk?
  • I want to be here for you.
  • Let me know if you just want a listening ear, or if you need help or advice.
  • What I appreciate about you is…
  • So what I think you’re saying is…
  • Help me understand what you mean by that.
  • How would you like things to be?
  • Thanks for sharing your opinion.
  • I sense you’re feeling ___. Tell me more.
  • I appreciate your concerns.
  • Would you like my thoughts?
  • I’m sorry, that’s not what I meant to imply. What I meant was _____.
  • I’m sorry, what do you need me to do to make it up to you?
  • Let me think on that and get back to you.
  • Let’s get more facts on this and then revisit it.
  • I recognize I’m also part of the problem.
  • Let’s take a break to cool-down.
  • Let’s agree to disagree for now.
  • Let’s get outside help with this.