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It happens quickly.

Someone says something.
A tone shifts.
A look lands the wrong way.

And before we even realize it, we’re already responding.

A comment.
A correction.
A defense.

It feels immediate — almost automatic.

For most of my life, I thought that was normal. Necessary, even. If something was said, it required a response. If something felt off, it needed to be addressed.

But over time, I began to notice something else.

Not the reaction.

The moment before it.

It’s brief. Almost invisible.

A fraction of a second where nothing is said yet — but everything is about to be.

That space changed everything for me.

Because in that moment, there is a choice.

To react.
Or to pause.

To defend.
Or to observe.

To speak.
Or to wait just a little longer.

I didn’t learn all of this at once. It came slowly, almost reluctantly. Through conversations that escalated too quickly. Through misunderstandings that might have resolved themselves if I had just given them a moment.

Through realizing that not every comment requires a reply.

And not every feeling requires expression.

Sometimes what’s needed most is not a better response — but a delayed one.

Or no response at all.

In that small space before reaction, something shifts.

Emotion settles.
Perspective widens.
Understanding has a chance to catch up.

I’ve found that when I allow that moment to exist, I often see things differently. What felt sharp softens. What felt personal becomes less so. What felt urgent no longer is.

And occasionally, what I thought needed to be said… doesn’t.

There’s a quiet strength in that.

Not in withholding.
Not in avoidance.

But in choosing.

Choosing when to speak.
Choosing how to respond.
Choosing whether the moment even requires a response at all.

Most of us move through life reacting quickly.

But the people who understand themselves — and others — learn to live in that small space just before reaction.

It’s easy to miss.

But once you notice it, you begin to realize:

The most important part of what we say…
often happens before we say anything.

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Brad G. Philbrick

A grant proposal writer of biotechnology and healthcare

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