Regulate yourself first

You can only lend calm you actually have — settle your own state before helping someone else.

Why it works

Co-regulation flows from the steadier nervous system to the activated one, and arousal is contagious in both directions. If you approach an upset person already tense, you tend to escalate rather than settle them. Grounding yourself first means you have a regulated state to offer instead of adding to the alarm.

How to do it

  1. Before stepping in, take a few slow breaths and check your own arousal.
  2. Drop your shoulders, soften your face, slow your own pace.
  3. Only then turn your attention outward to the other person.

Evidence

Emotional contagion — the spread of affect and arousal between people — is well documented, and the premise that a calmer person can anchor an activated one underlies co-regulation models in developmental and relational research. (observational)

Contagion effects are reliable in direction; the strength of one person’s ability to settle another varies with relationship, context, and how activated each is.

Common mistake

Rushing in to fix someone’s distress while your own nervous system is spun up, which spreads agitation instead of calm.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach helps you settle your own state first, so when you turn to support someone you are offering steadiness rather than amplifying the tension.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).