Y12W17VC Four moves that disarm a conversation

Two people try to talk about something they disagree on. Within five minutes, both are angry. Within fifteen, they're arguing about grievances that go back years. Half an hour in, neither is making the point they started with. This is, for many people, what disagreement looks like. It doesn't have to. This week's article examines four specific moves that consistently de-escalate these conversations — even when used imperfectly.

Core Vocabulary

disarm

/dɪsˈɑːrm/|dis·arm

vb | [disarms, disarmed, disarming]

To remove hostility or suspicion from a situation; to make someone less defensive or angry.

Word Breakdown: dis- (remove/apart, Latin) + arm (weapon)

Word family: disarmed (v.), disarming (v.), disarmament (n.)

Synonyms: calm, defuse, pacify

Collocations: disarm a conversation, disarm tension, disarming approach

Example: There are specific moves that consistently de-escalate these conversations even when used imperfectly.

In the articleFour moves that disarm a conversation

de-escalate

/ˌdiːˈɛskəleɪt/|de·es·ca·late

vb | [de-escalates, de-escalated, de-escalating]

To reduce the intensity or severity of a situation, particularly in conflict; to lower tensions.

Word Breakdown: de- (reduce) + escalate (intensify)

Word family: de-escalated (v.), de-escalating (v.), de-escalation (n.)

Synonyms: calm, reduce tension, lower intensity

Collocations: de-escalate conflict, de-escalate tension, help de-escalate

Example: Accurate emotional labels tend to de-escalate, because people feel heard.

In the articleAccurate emotional labels tend to de-escalate, because people feel heard.

script

/skrɪpt/|script

n

A prepared sequence of words or predetermined dialogue; a guide for what to say in a specific situation.

Word family: scripted (v.), scripting (v.)

Synonyms: dialogue, template, framework

Collocations: provide a script, follow the script, specific script

Example: The framework provides something to lean on while deeper capacities form, offering a specific script for applying Rogers's principles.

In the articleNVC gives a specific script for applying Rogers's principles outside the therapy room, in the ordinary difficult conversations of family, work and community life.

observation

/ˌɑːbzərˈveɪʃən/|ob·ser·va·tion

n

Factual noticing or description without evaluation or judgment; a statement of what is seen or noticed.

Word Breakdown: ob- (toward, Latin) + -serv (watch) + -ation (act of)

Word family: observe (v.), observational (adj.)

Synonyms: remark, statement, description

Collocations: observation without evaluation, careful observation

Example: Describe what's actually happening in terms a camera could capture, without the judgements or interpretations that usually come attached.

In the articleObservation without evaluation. Describe what's actually happening in terms a camera could capture, without the judgements or interpretations that usually come attached.

articulate

/ɑːrˈtɪkjuleɪt/|ar·tic·u·late

vb | [articulates, articulated, articulating]

To express clearly and distinctly; to put into words in a coherent manner.

Word Breakdown: articul- (joint, Latin) + -ate (verb form)

Word family: articulated (v.), articulating (v.)

Synonyms: express, state, voice

Collocations: articulate the emotional state, articulate your feelings

Example: Rosenberg's framework breaks a difficult message into four components that do specific psychological work, allowing someone to articulate needs and feelings clearly.

In the articlethe deliberate practice of understanding and articulating the other party's emotional state without necessarily agreeing with it.

grievance

/ˈɡriːvəns/|griev·ance

n

A cause for complaint or resentment; a legitimate wrong that has been suffered.

Word Breakdown: griev- (heavy, Latin) + -ance (state of)

Word family: grieve (v.), grieving (v.)

Synonyms: complaint, resentment, wrong

Collocations: long-standing grievance, past grievance, address a grievance

Example: Within fifteen, the conversation has moved from the original topic to grievances that go back years.

In the articleWithin fifteen, the conversation has moved from the original topic to grievances that go back years.

mediator

/ˈmiːdieɪtər/|me·di·a·tor

n

One who helps resolve conflict between parties; a neutral third party who facilitates agreement.

Word Breakdown: med- (middle, Latin) + -iator (agent who)

Word family: mediate (v.), mediation (n.)

Synonyms: intermediary, peacemaker, arbitrator

Collocations: professional mediator, act as mediator, trained mediators

Example: Marshall Rosenberg trained mediators in conflict zones around the world.

In the articleMarshall Rosenberg trained mediators in conflict zones — Palestine and Israel, Rwanda after the genocide, Northern Ireland.

stakes

/steɪks/|stakes

n

What is at risk or at issue; the consequences or importance of something.

Word family: stake (n.)

Synonyms: risk, consequence, importance

Collocations: high stakes, what's at stake, raises the stakes

Example: He trained mediators in contexts where the ability to have difficult conversations without destroying the relationship had genuinely high stakes.

In the articleRosenberg spent decades teaching the framework to mediators, teachers, therapists, activists, and prisoners — contexts where the ability to have difficult conversations without destroying the relationship had genuinely high stakes.

Technical Terms

Nonviolent Communication

/ˌnɑːnvaɪələnt kəˌmjuːnɪˈkeɪʃən/|Non·vi·o·lent Com·mu·ni·ca·tion

noun

Rosenberg's framework for difficult conversations: observation, feeling, need, request—a structured approach to expressing oneself without blame or judgment.

Synonyms: NVC, compassionate communication, heart-centered communication

Collocations: NVC framework, Nonviolent Communication approach

Example: Instead of "You're lazy," NVC reframes as: "When tasks aren't done by the deadline, I feel frustrated because I value reliability."

In the articleThere's a different pattern — calmer, more honest, less expensive — that some people seem to fall into naturally and others have to learn deliberately. What most of the research suggests is that this calmer pattern can be decomposed into specific moves.

observation without evaluation

/ˌɑːbzərˈveɪʃən wɪðˈaʊt ˌɛvæljuˈeɪʃən/|ob·ser·va·tion with·out e·val·u·a·tion

noun phrase

The NVC move of stating facts or describing behaviour without judgement, blame, or interpretation.

Synonyms: objective observation, non-judgmental observation, factual description

Collocations: practice observation without evaluation

Example: Observation: "You've been quiet in meetings this week." Evaluation: "You're unengaged."

In the articleObservation without evaluation. Describe what's actually happening in terms a camera could capture, without the judgements or interpretations that usually come attached.

feeling statement

/ˈfiːlɪŋ ˈsteɪtmənt/|feel·ing state·ment

noun phrase

Expressing one's emotion without blaming; stating how one feels rather than what one thinks the other person has done.

Synonyms: emotional expression, affective statement, emotional declaration

Collocations: make a feeling statement, genuine feeling statement

Example: A feeling statement is "I feel anxious" not "I feel like you don't care" (the latter is a thought wrapped in feeling words).

In the articleFeelings. Say what you're feeling, in specific emotional language, rather than what you think or what the other person has done.

need statement

/ˈniːd ˈsteɪtmənt/|need state·ment

noun phrase

Identifying and expressing the underlying human need being unmet; framing needs as universal rather than as blame.

Synonyms: underlying need, core need, motivation statement

Collocations: articulate a need statement, underlying need statement

Example: A need statement identifies what matters: "I need to be heard" or "I need autonomy in how I work."

In the articleNeeds. Name the underlying need that's producing the feeling, in a form the other person might share.

request

/rɪˈkwɛst/|re·quest

noun

A specific, actionable ask that the other person could reasonably act on, distinct from a demand; something that can be declined.

Word family: request

Synonyms: ask, appeal

Collocations: make a request, specific request, actionable request

Example: A request is "Would you be willing to check in with me daily?" not "You never communicate."

In the articleRequests. Make a specific, actionable request that the other person could reasonably act on. Not I want you to care more. That's not actionable.

Figurative Phrases

slide downhill

To deteriorate or get worse; an idiom using downward motion as metaphor for decline.

Etymology/Type: Metaphor from downward motion; sliding downhill signals decline or deterioration in a situation.

Synonyms: go downhill, deteriorate steadily, worsen over time

Example: Their friendship began to slide downhill after a misunderstanding that neither of them addressed directly.

In the articleOnce you notice this, you can interrupt the pattern. The response will come when the other person finishes speaking.

blow over

To pass without incident or lasting consequence; an idiom derived from weather metaphor.

Etymology/Type: Weather metaphor; storms that blow over pass without lasting damage, applied to conflicts and crises.

Synonyms: pass without lasting damage, die down, resolve itself

Example: She assumed the tension in the group would blow over, but it hadn't — it needed to be addressed directly.

In the articleHalf an hour in, neither is making the point they started with.

boil over

To erupt in anger or violent emotion; an idiom derived from cooking metaphor.

Etymology/Type: Metaphor from liquids; when liquid boils past the container edge, it signals eruption; applied to anger.

Synonyms: erupt, spill over, reach a breaking point

Example: Weeks of unaddressed resentment finally boiled over during the group presentation rehearsal.

In the articleHere's a pattern most people know from their own experience. Two people are trying to talk about something they disagree on. Neither starts out angry. Within five minutes, both are angry.

cool down

To reduce intensity or emotion; an idiom where 'cool' is figurative for calm.

Etymology/Type: Temperature metaphor; cooling something reduces intensity, applied figuratively to reducing emotional heat.

Synonyms: calm down, de-escalate, bring the temperature down

Example: He suggested they take a ten-minute break to cool down before continuing the conversation.

In the articleOnce the emotional temperature has dropped, you can then work together on interests, options, and objective criteria.

lose it

To lose composure or self-control; an idiom where 'it' is a vague referent for self-control.

Etymology/Type: Idiom with vague "it"; losing composure or self-control, where "it" is an indefinite stand-in for emotional regulation.

Synonyms: lose your composure, snap, react without control

Example: She almost lost it when the third member of the group missed the deadline, but took a breath before responding.

In the articleBy half an hour in, both parties are saying things they'll wish they hadn't said.

reach a boiling point

To escalate to a crisis or maximum tension; an idiom derived from cooking metaphor where boiling is the critical point.

Etymology/Type: Temperature metaphor from liquids; boiling signals maximum heat and eruption, applied to escalating tension.

Synonyms: hit a crisis point, reach a breaking point, come to a head

Example: The tension in the project team reached a boiling point when two members accused each other of not contributing fairly.

In the articleWithin fifteen, the conversation has moved from the original topic to grievances that go back years.

Confusing Words

disarm vs. diffuse vs. defuse

These are commonly confused words—they all involve reducing intensity or spreading something out—but they differ in what is being reduced and how, and using one when you mean the other can obscure your intended meaning.

  • disarm means to remove hostility, suspicion, or defensiveness from a situation—when someone uses observation without evaluation, they disarm the other party's defenses because there's no judgment to react against, creating space for genuine conversation.
  • diffuse means to spread out or scatter something widely (like a diffuse light that spreads rather than concentrating, or a diffuse group spread across a large area), while defuse means to remove danger or reduce tension in a way analogous to removing the fuse from a bomb—NVC helps defuse tense situations by removing the threat of blame, while observation without evaluation spreads attention across facts rather than concentrating it on judgment.

If you mean to remove hostility or defensiveness, use disarm. If you mean to spread something out, use diffuse. If you mean to remove danger or reduce tension (like defusing a bomb), use defuse.

observation vs. evaluation

These are contrasting terms at opposite ends of a spectrum—they represent fundamentally different ways of describing what's happening—and using one when you mean the other can obscure whether you're stating facts or making judgments.

  • observation is a factual, objective description of what is actually happening, stated in terms a camera could capture without judgment or interpretation—an observation is 'You've arrived after 9am three times this month,' which describes what happened without claiming anything about the person's character.
  • evaluation is an interpretation or judgment about what something means, assigning value or blame—an evaluation is 'You're always late,' which goes beyond fact to interpretation, triggering defensiveness because it makes a claim about the person's habits and character rather than describing specific events.

If you're stating what actually happened in factual terms, use observation. If you're making a judgment or interpretation about what something means, use evaluation.

grievance vs. grudge

These are near-synonyms—both describe ill will or resentment—but they differ in specificity and duration, and using one when you mean the other can obscure whether you're talking about a specific wrong or a long-standing pattern of ill will.

  • grievance is a specific, identifiable cause for complaint—it has a clear trigger and timeframe, like 'you forgot my birthday' or 'you missed the deadline'—grievances can usually be addressed through NVC or apology because they have concrete origins.
  • grudge is ongoing resentment or ill will, often accumulated over time from multiple grievances or a pattern of perceived wrongs—holding a grudge means maintaining anger across many incidents, and grudges are harder to resolve with a single conversation because they involve years of accumulated feeling.

If you're referring to a specific cause for complaint with a clear trigger, use grievance. If you're describing ongoing resentment built up over time, use grudge.