How to Be Less Reactive
To be less reactive, find the small gap between what happens and your response to it, and widen it by one breath. Reactivity fires in that split-second; a single conscious breath gives the calmer, wiser part of you time to arrive before the reflex does.
In short
- Reactivity fires in the split-second gap between trigger and response.
- One conscious breath widens that gap so you reply from calm, not reflex.
- Feel the surge honestly, just don't let it grab the steering wheel.
Reactivity lives in the gap
Between something happening, a sharp comment, bad news, a flash of frustration, and your reaction to it, there's a gap. Usually it's a fraction of a second wide, and most of our regrets live inside it: the snapped reply, the panicked yes, the message sent hot. Being less reactive isn't about feeling less; it's about widening that gap, even by a single breath, so your response comes from somewhere steadier than reflex.
One breath before you answer
The whole skill fits in one move: when something pokes you, take one conscious breath before you respond. Not to suppress the feeling — to make room for the part of you that isn't hijacked. The same words, said one breath later, come from a different place entirely. Reactivity is fast and narrow; the breath buys you a half-second of width, and in that width you have a choice.
This works because you are not your first impulse. There's the flash of reaction, and there's the awareness watching it. The breath is how you step from being inside the reaction to observing it, and a reaction you can observe is one you no longer have to obey.
Meet the feeling, don't fight it
Less reactive doesn't mean bottling things up, that just builds pressure. It means feeling the surge (the anger, the hurt, the urge) honestly, while not letting it grab the steering wheel. You let the wave be a wave, ride it for one breath, and respond once it's no longer cresting. The feeling is allowed; it just doesn't get to drive.
- Notice the body's early signal of reactivity, the jaw, the heat in the chest, the urge to fire back.
- Take one slow breath before you say or do anything. Drop your shoulders on the out-breath.
- Then respond — from the wider, calmer place that just showed up in the gap.
If reactivity is bound up with overwhelming anger or anxiety that's hurting your life, that deserves real support, not just a breathing tip. The free 7-day guide builds this gently, and the full method is in the book Tantra Is Not What You Think.
Common questions
How can I be less reactive?
Find the gap between trigger and response and widen it by one breath. When something pokes you, take a single conscious breath before you react. That small pause lets the calmer, wiser part of you arrive before the reflex fires, so you respond instead of snap.
Why am I so reactive?
Reactivity is a fast, automatic survival response, the mind reacts before you've had time to think. It's normal, not a flaw. The skill isn't to stop feeling; it's to widen the split-second gap between the trigger and your response so reflex doesn't run the show.
Does being less reactive mean suppressing my feelings?
No, suppression just builds pressure. Being less reactive means feeling the surge honestly while not letting it grab the wheel. You ride the wave for one breath and respond once it's no longer cresting. The feeling is allowed; it just doesn't get to drive.
What's a quick way to stop overreacting in the moment?
One breath before you answer. Notice the body's early signal, a clenched jaw, heat in the chest, and take a single slow breath, dropping your shoulders, before you say or do anything. Respond from the calmer place that shows up in that pause.
Want the whole thing, gently?
This is one idea from Tantra Is Not What You Think, the calm, modern guide to letting everything be. Start with the free 7-day letting-go guide, or read the book.
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