Flooding Protocol For Couples
Flooding Protocol For Couples
Flooding Protocol For Couples
FOR COUPLES
THIS FLOODING PROTOCOL MAY BE THE
KEY TO TRANSFORMING CONFLICT WITH
YOUR PARTNER.
Jordan Dann
The intention of this guide is to
provide a little bit of attachment
theory along with a practical
protocol that you and your partner
can implement to interrupt the
escalation of conflict.
JORDAN DANN
Trauma-Informed
Somatic Therapy for
Individuals and
Couples in NYC &
beyond
THE NECESSITY OF
ATTACHMENT AND THE
RESULTING FORMATION OF
OUR NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
*neurophysiology
n. a branch of neuroscience that is concerned with the normal and
abnormal functioning of the nervous system, including the chemical
and electrical activities of individual neurons
FIRST:
Come to an agreement that both of you will stop any
interaction between you when either begins to notice that
you are moving outside of your window of tolerance.
SECOND:
Agree on a nonverbal signal or phrase that will not evoke
defensiveness in one another. Verbal cues have a greater
tendency to evoke defensiveness, so you might come up with
a hand signal such as a flat palm in the air. This hand signal is
for you to let your partner know that you are taking care of
your nervous system, and by extension you are caring for the
relationship. DO NOT put your hand in your partner’s face;
respect their body boundary and place your hand close to
your own body.
If you prefer a verbal cue you might try:
“I’m feeling activated right now.”
“I need to pause this conversation.”
“I’m outside my window of tolerance.”
“I need to take a break and come back later when I am
feeling more regulated.”
Agree to use this signal when one or both of you is flooded
OR when the conversation is deteriorating. When the signal is
given, all communication stops. If one of you leaves the room
to take a break, the other person should not follow. Take time
to come back into regulation, then follow the steps below.
THIRD:
The person who calls for the time-out is responsible for:
1. Remembering the issue discussed.
2. Once calm, discussing with your partner when would be a
good time to sit down and calmly discuss the
disagreement —at least one hour and no more than seven
days later.
3. Soothing yourselves during this time. This is critical.
Resume the conversation only when both of you are calm.
4. Choosing a process with which to discuss the topic. I
highly recommend Imago Dialogue or Nonviolent
Communication as a dialogical structure. Otherwise, try
agreeing that you’ll take turns speaking and each of you
will summarize what you’ve heard one another say. The
goal here is to listen deeply and to make space for your
DIFFERENT experiences.
NOTE: Some couples have the agreement that once a
time-out has been given, the person who requested it
will send a sweet text to the other — something
reassuring, something comforting. I’ve seen couples
agree simply on a “Hello” to something more, such as
“We’ll get through this. I love you.” If this fits for you,
discuss this and come to some agreement.