“Morning Joe” co-host and Know Your Value founder Mika Brzezinski is the first to admit that she understands what it takes to deal with emotional triggers at work.
“I’m going to bring up my favorite word in the whole world, because I do this, and I get this, and it’s bad every time: being triggered,” Brzezinski told executive career coach Liz Bentley in an interview for Know Your Value. From processing the body’s physical reaction, to being triggered, to identifying coping strategies, Brzezinski and Bentley talked through an issue that Bentley often works through with her clients.
“I think everyone is uniquely triggered because our triggers come from our subconscious,” Bentley said.
While emotional triggers vary, they can include any topic that makes us feel uncomfortable, according to Psychology Today. When someone feels triggered, they might lash out at the person they’re speaking to, or might feel panicked and retreat into themselves.
“It’s our past life, it’s in our subconscious,” Bentley said. “A lot of times I find it’s a lot of work to help someone find what is the source of a trigger.” She said often, the source can create a downward spiral for both people involved in the conversation.
“What I see happen in the workplace, almost all the time is, let’s say you get triggered when you’re in a conversation with someone and then they get triggered, and now two people are triggered,” Bentley said. “And the whole thing becomes a mess.”
Her advice is to stay calm and do everything you can not to escalate the tension.
“If you’re working with someone and you notice that they get triggered over something, don’t get triggered back,” Bentley said. “Stay neutral and be empathetic to their trigger and just work through it. So don’t allow the ping-pong of the two triggers.”
Bentley tells her clients that the key to recognizing triggers is to identify what’s happening emotionally and physically.
“What we usually find is, first we feel it in our body,” Bentley told Brzezinski. “And when I find one of my clients is triggered I’ll say, ‘Where do you feel it?’ Everyone’s different. They feel it in their gut, in their neck, in their head, in their chest, so you feel a physical response because something happens that makes you upset.”
“The next thing that happens is we start to shut down our listening. We can’t listen to people,” Bentley said. She calls it being “emotionally hijacked.”









