EP19 · What No One Tells You — Leadership Unveiled

The Moment Before You Say Something You Regret

⏱ 00:07:27 📅 March 30, 2026 📄 Transcript available

Episode Notes

Every manager has a moment they are not proud of; the meeting where they snapped, the conversation where the wrong words came out before the right ones had a chance to form. In this episode, I am giving you a practical, three-step technique you can use in real time, in the room, the moment you feel your emotions starting to take over.

No theory. No generic advice to "stay calm." Just a concrete tool, the Three-Beat Pause, that takes three to five seconds and works precisely when you need it most.

You will learn where to locate your body's stress signal before your mouth opens, how to name what you are feeling silently to reduce its intensity on the spot, and how to choose your first word deliberately so it sets the right tone for everything that follows.

The companion PDF for this episode includes a full body signal inventory, an emotion labelling list, and a one-week exercise to put this into practice immediately.

Hello everyone and welcome back to What No One Tells You. My name is Claudia Slujitoru and this is the podcast where we talk honestly about what it actually takes to lead people. Today we are going into something that every manager I have ever worked with has experienced at least once — and most have experienced far more often than they would like to admit. We are talking about losing control of your emotions at work, and more specifically, what you do in the exact moment it is already happening. But let me ask you something before we begin. When was the last time you felt your jaw tighten in a meeting, or noticed your thoughts start racing as someone said something that caught you completely off guard? When was the last time your mouth opened before your brain had quite finished deciding what you actually wanted to say? If you are a manager, I suspect the answer is closer than you would like it to be — because this is one of those experiences that comes with the territory of leading people, and yet almost nobody gives you a practical tool for handling it in real time. That is precisely what I'm giving you today. But before I get to the technique, I want you to sit with one idea for a moment. Your body reacts to emotional triggers faster than your conscious mind does, and this is not a character flaw or a sign that you are not suited to leadership. It is simply how the human nervous system works. When you feel threatened, dismissed, disrespected, or blindsided, your physiology activates before you have had any single rational thought. Which is why the well-meaning advice to "just stay calm" so rarely works in practice. By the time you're thinking, you're already two steps behind the moment. What does work — what actually interrupts the reactive cycle before the damage is done — is having a pre-loaded response. Something your nervous system and your mind can execute almost automatically. Something that creates just enough space between the trigger and what comes out of your mouth. That space, small as it seems, is the difference between the manager who handles the situation and the one who becomes the story that gets told about it afterwards. The Three-Beat Pause Here is the technique. I call it the Three-Beat Pause, and the goal is to practice it until it becomes as instinctive as breathing. Beat One: Locate the signal. The moment you feel something shift inside you, your only job is to find it in your body. Not to analyze it, not to push it down — just to register it. Is it in your chest, your throat, your shoulders, or your stomach? This takes approximately one second, and what it does is quite remarkable. It moves your attention inward, which immediately interrupts the impulse to react outward. You are buying yourself time and space without anyone in the room being remotely aware that this is what you are doing. Ask yourself: where do I feel stress first in my body? Most people have a signature location — a place where the tension lands before it becomes visible behavior. Learning yours is one of the most useful things you can do for your leadership, because the moment you feel it, that is your signal. The Three-Beat Pause begins right there. Beat Two: Name what you are feeling — silently. Not out loud, not even in a whisper. Just inside, in two or three words. I am angry. I feel dismissed. I am embarrassed. There is a consistent body of research in neuroscience showing that simply labeling an emotion reduces its intensity, because naming what you feel shifts activity from the reactive part of your brain towards the part that thinks, reasons, and chooses. You are not suppressing the emotion or pretending it is not there. You are processing it just enough to remain the person in the room who decides what happens next, rather than the one who simply reacts to what happened. This takes another second or two at most — and to everyone around you, you are simply present and attentive. Beat Three: Take one slow breath and choose your first word. Not your whole response, not even your whole first sentence — just your first word, because the first word sets the entire tone of everything that follows. I understand opens a very different conversation than but. That is interesting lands very differently than no. Tell me more creates a very different dynamic than that is not right. One deliberate breath, one chosen first word — and then you speak. The whole sequence takes between three and five seconds, which is all you need to move from reactive to intentional. From the manager who snapped to the manager who held it together. From the person people discussed quietly after the meeting ended to the one they described as someone who never loses the plot under pressure. Your Exercise for This Week Identify one recurring situation at work where emotions tend to run high for you. It might be a particular team meeting, a one-to-one with a specific person, or the moment your own manager gives you critical feedback. Before that situation arises, take 30 seconds to remind yourself of the three beats. During it, notice when your body signal appears and run the sequence. Afterwards, take just one minute to reflect: Did the pause happen? What was the first word you chose? What felt different? You are not training yourself to become someone who feels nothing. You are training yourself to feel everything — and still choose deliberately and consciously how you show up. That is the whole difference between a manager who is controlled by the room and the manager who controls themselves inside it. The companion PDF for this episode gives you the Three-Beat Pause as a one-page reference card, including a body signal inventory, an emotion labeling list, and everything you need to start the weekly exercise. You will find it in the show notes. And if this episode resonated with you, please share it with the manager in your network who could use it — because every team deserves a leader who has learned how to pause. My name is Claudia Slujitoru, and now you know — because I told you. See you next time. Goodbye.

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