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3 Things To Do Before Sending A Text You’ll Regret, By A Psychologist

By A Psychologis,Contributor,Mark Travers

Copyright forbes

3 Things To Do Before Sending A Text You’ll Regret, By A Psychologist

Here’s how you can pause, reflect and respond to outsmart your impulsive texts before they backfire.

We’ve all been there. A message rises up in your head — cutting, desperate, full of feeling — and before you can even think, your thumb finds itself poised over “send.” Maybe it’s fury at your partner for forgetting a plan, irritation at a coworker for not meeting a deadline or a furious reply to a friend who pushed a limit. In that moment, your logical head can feel totally overcome by feeling. A single thoughtless tap, and the damage is irreparable.

In clinical practices, many people are found struggling with the consequences of receiving such messages: anxiety, guilt, regret and even the gradual loss of trust in relationships. While we can’t avoid emotional highs entirely, we can better regulate them. And it all begins before the text even goes out from your phone.

Here are three evidence-based techniques for taking a moment, pausing to reflect and responding that maintains your relationships, your reputation and your own mental health.

1. Activate Your Nervous System’s Pause

Before sending a heated or emotional text, pause and check in with your body. Emotional surges aren’t just “in your head,” they’re very much full-body events that change how your brain works. Under stress, the prefrontal cortex (PFC), which is responsible for reasoning and impulse control, temporarily loses efficiency.

Studies indicate that when stress chemicals such as norepinephrine and dopamine inundate the system, they throw the PFC’s electrical equilibrium into disarray, degrading the neural wiring that underlies logical thinking. In that moment, your reflective circuits go offline, and reactive, emotion-driven ones take over. The result? You’re more likely to misinterpret tone, overreact or fire off something snappier than you mean to.

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In short, you literally lose some capacity for clear thinking when your emotions peak.

So, the first step in avoiding regret is to regulate before you respond. Here’s how to do so:

Breathe deeply. Inhale slowly for four counts, hold for four and exhale for six. The longer you take to exhale and empty out your lungs, the faster it is to activate your parasympathetic nervous system (the “rest and digest” mode) which counterbalances your fight-or-flight reaction.

Do a body scan. Are your jaws clenched? Is your shoulder stiff and tight? Is your heart rate fast or normal? Label the sensation, call it out. “Ah, that’s anger!” Simply naming an emotion reduces its intensity, a phenomenon supported by affect labeling research.

Ground yourself. Touch something tangible to anchor yourself. Perhaps the desk you are working on, your chair that you are sitting in or the floor beneath your feet. This physical anchor reminds your brain that the threat is not immediate, giving rational thought some room to re-engage.

Remember, a simple pause doesn’t have to be long or complicated. Even 30–60 seconds of conscious regulation can significantly lower your emotional reactivity. When your nervous system calms, your words follow suit.

2. Step Into A Third-Person Perspective

Once your body has calmed, the second step is psychological distancing. Seeing your situation from the outside can prevent emotional escalation and add a layer of perspective.

Recent research on meaning-making indicates that when there is high emotional intensity, a third-person, or “self-distanced,” perspective helps people better make sense of their experience. It increases coherence (knowledge and understanding of what happened) and mattering (one’s sense of personal significance and self-worth). If, however, emotional intensity is low, reframing the event in a more positive light is more effective.

Self distancing, then, becomes your top asset. It breaks your tunnel vision and activates higher-level thinking, allowing you to consider context, consequences and alternative interpretations; just the kind of mental focus you’ll want before hitting “send.” To use this tool, try the following:

Visualize your message from an outsider’s perspective. Imagine you are a trusted friend reading the text. Would you advise someone else to send it? Would it help or hurt the relationship?

Ask yourself “What’s the story here?” Instead of focusing on the emotional surge, step back and reconstruct the scenario neutrally. For instance: “My friend missed our call. They may be busy or they may have forgotten.”

Consider long-term outcomes. Texts often feel urgent because they promise immediate emotional release. Ask: “How will this message affect my relationship in an hour, a day or a week?”

By taking this outside perspective, you move from being reactive to being reflective, enabling empathy, reason and foresight to drive your communication.

3. Draft Your Message But Don’t Send It Yet

Finally, give yourself time to settle before any message is delivered. Writing is a powerful outlet for emotion as it lets you clarify your feelings without inflicting them.

Further, behavioral research shows that impulsivity isn’t constant; it fluctuates with emotional arousal. In states of stress or excitement, our capacity for response inhibition, also understood as the mental brake that prevents rash reactions, becomes more fragile.

A recent study on emotion-related impulsivity found that while individuals prone to acting rashly do struggle with self-control, emotional arousal doesn’t always destroy this ability outright. It just makes it more vulnerable. This means that a small delay, even 20–30 minutes, can be enough for arousal to subside and self-regulation to return online.

Here’s how it works: When you wait, you’re not suppressing your feelings. You’re protecting your judgment. Often, the text you draft in the heat of emotion and the one you actually send an hour later reveal two different versions of you, one that is more of a reactive self and the other, that’s more reflective in nature. Waiting allows the latter to speak.

To express your feelings without impulsively sending the text, try the following:

Write freely. Draft the text as it comes, including all the raw emotion. This is your private space to vent and process.

Save it in a draft folder or notes app. Out of sight, out of mind. This physical separation helps you resist the impulse to send immediately.

Revisit with fresh eyes. After the pause, read the message again. Often, what feels urgent or essential in the heat of the moment seems unnecessary, excessive or even slightly humorous. Many people are surprised to find they no longer feel the need to send it at all. Or that a softer, more measured version feels far more effective.

We are shaped by tiny, instantaneous choices in this ever progressing era. A single text can ignite conflict, mend tension or even shift a relationship’s trajectory. The key is not to suppress feelings. It’s about responding intelligently, with foresight and empathy. It allows you to honor your emotions while also protecting the relationships that matter most.

Next time you feel that surge of emotional urgency, remember: your thumb doesn’t have to dictate your reality. Sometimes, the smartest message is the one you don’t send immediately.

But most importantly, do you always find yourself on the emotional edge in your relationship? Take the science-backed Relationship Satisfaction Scale to find out.

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