De-escalation Techniques
when conversations are ESCALATING…
DE-ESCALATION: helping someone return to baseline state (stable) so they can manage their needs
PRIMARY TOOL: Effective communication
BEFORE ESCALATION OCCURS…ponder the following:
- Conflict occurs anytime two people do not agree
- You are in-charge of how you react and communicate verbally and non-verbally – assess your emotions
- Shift your thinking about a situation and you change the outcome
- Changing your own behavior, you change the outcome of the situation
- Understand conflict is NOT personal - rationally detach and do NOT be defensive
- The trigger point for escalation is a perception of threat (of any kind – physical, emotional, intellectual)
- Accept responsibility for your part in any conflict and apologize for it
CHALLENGE: Meet the escalating situation with a healthy response without over-reacting
- A situation is spiraling out of control and now you or someone else is threatened
- Natural response is to react and protect (fight or flight response)
- We can control our own “flight/fight” response with awareness
- Our awareness can help us maintain self-control and allow us to THINK critically
CONSTANTLY ASSESS WHAT IS HAPPENING:
- Evaluate the person’s behavior before acting/intervening
- Listen with empathy to try and understand where the person is coming from – sometimes all we need to do is allow a person to vent
- Consider any responses asfeedback (this is not an attack to you – try not to take it personally):
- What is driving the behavior?
- What is the person’s motivation?
- Does the person simply need to vent?
- What does the person hope to gain? Or avoid?
- Focus on feelings, “Tell me what that feels like” or “That must be scary”
- Seek alternatives that meet the person’s needs
- Use active listening techniques (give undivided attention, ask clarifying questions, paraphrase responses, and ask open-ended questions)
- Acknowledge and accept emotions/feelings – FREE of JUDGEMENT
- Apologize if the situation is unjust or unfair – a sincere apology is powerful
SPECIFIC TIPS – easy in concept, achieving them is not always easy
- Manage yourself physically and mentally BEFORE any encounter
- Trust your instincts
- Obtain the name of the person with whom you are speaking
- Reflect respect and dignity and suspend judgement
- Appear confident, but NOT cocky – unplug the power struggle
- Come with knowledge, empathy and understanding of the situation
- Knowledge on funding, resources, and information
- Work toward collaboration and building relationship
- Reduce direct eye contact, do not stare
- Allow adequate space – give ground and avoid sudden movements like sitting down, backing away
- Silence works – you add no fuel to the fire and others will generally start talking
- Touching can increase the risk of escalation, even just a light touch on the arm or shoulder
- Formulate a PLAN – looking to the future rather than the past – considering how do we move to the next step together
- Talk in a lower modulated tone of voice
- If the situation continues to escalate,stop – sometimes our best option is to respectfully end the current conversation and revisit the discussion at another time
- It is critical to come back later for resolution
- Consider boundaries, modeling, accountability
- Stay focused on your goal and hopefully everyone remains safe
- Believe that you have an impact – you do!
PROCESS GUIDELINESwhen calm returns:
- Practice helps – use these techniques in all circumstances…at home, in the office, on the street, at the grocery store
- Whenever possible, debrief what happened to learn how to handle things even better the next time
- Remember, that by searching and discovering a peaceful solution, you canpositively impact the situation
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