Feel like you’re constantly just one comment or eye-roll away from losing it? Or you’re easily triggered by things not even directed at you?
Or do you let other people’s negativity mess with your head?
You’re not alone; it’s a big club. Here’s the truth most people totally miss—taking offence isn’t just about what they say or do. It’s really about what your brain has been trained to expect.
It’s called “expectation bias.” As Anais Nin puts it so well, “We don’t see things as they are. We see things as we are.” We don’t get offended by what happened, but by what we expected to happen. Sometimes it’s called the “self-fulfilling prophesy.”
We all carry deep down inside invisible emotional reflexes—fast, hyper-reactive, and preloaded, usually by old and unhealed wounds from the past.
That sharp, sarcastic comeback forming in your head before they even finish their sentence? That’s your Offence-Rehearsed Reflex automatically kicking in. And the more you let it get triggered, the stronger it grows, much like muscle memory is physically. Were you aware of that?
It’s time to retrain those hidden reflexes, isn’t it?
Each day using this method, you’ll get one new mindset flip, one confidence-building message to yourself, and one clear mental reset. This builds on the Mindset-Reset Thought Shifters introduced in our earlier Psychology Today blogs. But this post is about freedom challenges, not just theories. A mental release you’ll start to feel by the end of day two and beyond.
Each day, regardless of how you are provoked or triggered, you picture a red-and-white STOP sign in your head, then implement each of these steps. And to make it stick, run through all the steps each day—repetition is what turns a reaction into a new reflex.
Example: If you’re on Day 4, quickly revisit Days 1 through 3, then layer on the new step.
DAY 1 – INTERRUPT THE PATTERN
Your Offence-Rehearsed Reflex is automatic. But you analyse your thinking before you react, and you win.
Message to Self: “I have five seconds right now to get control—or hand it over to them. By inspecting my thoughts, I win, they lose control over me.”
That split-second pause is the key to controlling your feelings by interrupting the spin-out cycle.
DAY 2 – DROP THE EXPECTATION SCRIPT
Offence feeds on fantasy. Somebody in your past likely wrote the script that hurt you. Time to end their infection programming on your own terms.
Message to Self: “I won’t let anybody any more tell me how to think! That’s over!”
Releasing your old expectations frees you up from other people’s soul poison, past and present.
DAY 3 – FLIP THE POWER DYNAMIC
You don’t need to argue, prove anything, or defend yourself. No more! The unique you is more than enough.
Message to Self: “What they just said? That’s their own mirror, not my identity. Those days are over!”
You win when you no longer need to win anybody’s approval. That’s how your own dignity rewrites the moment.
DAY 4 – REFUSE TO PLAY THE GAME
Every offence tries to assign you a role or a part: victim, villain, reject, or idiot. You choose to step out of their drama script by writing your own.
Message to Self: “I won’t let them or anybody else cast me in their sick play. I write my own scripts now.”
When you stop playing by their rules, game over, you’re free (and it’s about time, right?)
DAY 5 – LAUNCH YOUR OWN CLASSY LEVEL-UP BOMBSaying something kind turns their odor into your class-act fragrance. You don’t stoop to take the bait, you elevate, turning darkness to light.
Message to Self: “They say something cruel and mean, I’ll say something kind to turn their odor into perfume.”
When you unhook from their rage, you end up earning people’s respect. Warning: you have to go with this reset strategy and not with your own feelings to break the pattern.
DAY 6 – RINSE IT OFF, SHAKE IT OFF
Offense sticks to your soul like smoke to your clothes. But you can wash off the smell so it clings to you no more.
Message to Self: “I won’t carry other people’s stinging stink any more. I rinse and release by a healthy physical outlet.”
Motion rewires emotion—A brisk walk or run, deep stretching, or deep breathing can reset everything as you use it to let go of pent-up stress and negative energy.
DAY 7 – REWRITE THE SCENE
You can’t control what happened—but you can control how it’s remembered.
Message to Self: “I’m not the victim in their messed-up story. I’m the author of my own rewrite.”
That moment was filled with pain, yes. But now, it’s a turning point for gain. A plot twist… of your own design.
Why This Works
Neuroscientist and communication expert Dr. Caroline Leaf explains: “Your brain wires itself around the thoughts you rehearse. If you rehearse offense, you’ll live offended…”
Psychologist and researcher Dr. Ethan Kross, author of Chatter: The Voice in Our Head, agrees:
“When we coach ourselves in the third person—even with simple reframes—we create emotional distance and boost self-regulation.”
That’s exactly what the Unoffendable-Rewire Reset makes happen. You’re not just calming down—you’re rewiring your emotional reflexes to guard your soul.
Actionable Takeaways – In a Nutshell
• Offence is a learned reflex you’ve rehearsed. You can unlearn it.
• Rewiring takes repetition, not perfection. One flip a day is enough to form a new habit.
• Replace their odour with fragrance. You replace cruelty with class. Rage with respect.
• You’re not suppressing emotions—you’re cleansing and replacing them.
• Every response is either a rehearsal or a reset. Your choice.
If you found this helpful, you can take it even deeper in the first 4 blogs in the Unoffendable series:
- How to Be Unoffendable – 4-step mental reset
- Why We’re Hardwired to Take Offence So Easily
- Why You Let Certain People Offend You More Than Others
- How to Stay Unoffendable in an Angry and Polarised World
Together, they lay the foundation for you to take back control.
Don’t just read this. Try it. And then watch what happens.
• THE UNOFFENDABLE MINDSET-RESET — The harder it is for people to offend you, the fewer battles you’ll have to fight through. You can take offence, or you can take back control. It’s your choice — not theirs!
Why not take a picture of that statement and keep it handy on your phone so you can refer to it every day? And share it with friends by text or on social media? They’ll thank you for caring.