4 Stages of an Emotional Hijack — and How to Regain Control When It Happens
We’ve all been there – that moment when emotions take over and we react without thinking.
This experience — known as “emotional hijack” — can have significant consequences in the workplace if not managed properly.
Understanding what drives these moments and learning preventative strategies are key to maintaining healthy working relationships.
What is Emotional Hijack?
Emotional hijack refers to a strong emotional reaction that overrides rational thinking and self-control. Common behaviors during a hijack include:
- Jumping to conclusions
- Experiencing a racing heart
- Tensing up
- Bursting out in anger
- Struggling to think clearly
- Shutting down, or
- Demonstrating other extreme emotional reactions.
What often follows is regret, embarrassment, confusion and apologies once the moment has passed.
Emotional hijacks are intense experiences where we act compulsively without consideration of long-term impacts. The reaction often feels automatic and beyond our control in the heat of the moment, even though we later wish we had responded differently. Sometimes emotional hijacks build up over time if frustrations aren’t properly addressed.
The 4 Stages of Emotional Hijack
Emotional hijack often follows a common pattern:
- Identifying the trigger: The hijack begins with an event that acts as a “trigger,” sparking a strong emotion like anger, anxiety or humiliation. For example, a co-worker publicly criticizing your work can initiate feelings of anger or inadequacy.
- Feeling a strong emotion: The emotion intensifies rapidly, building in the body and mind. Heart rates spike, face flush, thoughts narrow. As emotion strengthens, rational perspectives diminish.
- Automatically reacting: We react compulsively to the emotion rather than responding thoughtfully. Reactions might include yelling, criticism, stonewalling or even aggression. We operate in survival mode without considering long-term consequences.
- Regret: After the moment passes, a sense of regret often follows. We may feel embarrassed by an aggressive outburst or disappointed in ourselves for losing control.
Developing Emotional Intelligence to Prevent Hijacks
Low emotional intelligence can lead to more instances of emotional hijacking. When we’re unable to self-regulate emotions, trivial triggers can escalate into disproportionate reactions. Communication shuts down. Teams fracture. Over time, negative patterns erode workplace relationships and performance.
Emotional intelligence requires self-awareness, self-control, empathy, and relationship skills. Strategies like the ones below build capacity.
1. Name Your Emotions
Name specific emotions in the moment rather than reacting blindly. Some researchers say that if you label your emotions accurately, it helps lessen the impulsive reactions.
For instance, try to figure out if you’re frustrated, hurt, disappointed, betrayed or overwhelmed. Research from UCLA has shown that naming emotions decreases amygdala activity and increases prefrontal cortex control.
2. Note Your Cues
Notice physical cues, like tense muscles, clenched fists, shallow breathing, increased heart or tightening. If you catch these early enough, you can prevent escalation.
Try a quick body scan for soft shoulders, relaxed jaw, open hands, and slow breathing.
3. Pause
Pause before responding to let intensity pass. The pause is a micro-strategy for regaining executive control. It interrupts emotional momentum and gives your nervous system time to settle.
When triggered, say nothing for a beat. Take one deep breath. Even better, if needed, ask to revisit the conversation later: “I want to think about that before I respond.”
4. Step Back
Put yourself in others’ shoes during conflicts. Emotional hijacks often narrow perspective; empathy widens it.
After you pause, silently ask, “What might they be feeling or needing right now?” This not only softens your response but helps you communicate in ways that de-escalate and repair trust.
Use Emotional Intelligence to Navigate
Collective emotional intelligence also matters. Workplace norms around communication, rules, and understanding leadership dynamics determine how well companies navigate tense situations. Emotionally intelligent cultures value respect, accountability and resilience.
Without emotional intelligence, trivial matters detonate more easily while underlying issues go unaddressed. Companies must prioritize training and norms that proactively shape response patterns. The baseline begins with each employee’s commitment to self-awareness, empathy, and relationship maintenance. It ends with healthier, higher-performing teams.
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