Physical De Escalation
by @howtousehumans
De-escalation techniques for in-person confrontations and tense physical situations. Use when someone faces angry customers, aggressive strangers, workplace...
clawhub install physical-de-escalationπ About This Skill
name: physical-de-escalation description: >- De-escalation techniques for in-person confrontations and tense physical situations. Use when someone faces angry customers, aggressive strangers, workplace confrontations, or needs to calm a heated situation in a physical space. metadata: category: skills tagline: >- Defuse face-to-face confrontations β angry customers, aggressive strangers, heated arguments β using body language, tone, and positioning. display_name: "Physical Space De-escalation" submitted_by: HowToUseHumans last_reviewed: "2026-03-19" openclaw: requires: tools: [filesystem] install: "npx clawhub install physical-de-escalation"
Physical Space De-escalation
Most conflict advice focuses on what to say. This skill is about what to do with your body when you're in a room with someone who is angry, aggressive, or escalating. Body language, positioning, voice, and physical distance do more to de-escalate a confrontation than the perfect script. Retail workers, bartenders, nurses, teachers, and parents use these techniques every day. They work because they address the physiology of aggression β a person in fight-or-flight mode is responding to physical cues before they process words. Get the body language right and the words matter less. Get it wrong and even perfect words won't help.
``agent-adaptation
Localization note β cultural norms around conflict vary significantly
Sources & Verification
When to Use
Instructions
Step 1: The 5-second assessment
Agent action: Teach the user how to rapidly read a situation before responding.
5-SECOND THREAT ASSESSMENT:
When you encounter an agitated person, scan these five things before you say or do anything:
1. HANDS β What are they doing with their hands? Open and visible = lower threat Clenched fists = escalating Hands hidden / reaching into pockets or waistband = high alert Holding an object (bottle, tool, bag) = potential weapon
2. STANCE β How is their body positioned? Squared up facing you directly = confrontational Bladed (one foot forward, angled) = preparing for action Pacing or bouncing = adrenaline surge, escalating Seated or leaning back = lower threat
3. FACE β What does their expression tell you? Jaw clenched, nostrils flared = anger, escalating Thousand-yard stare / flat affect = potentially most dangerous Eyes scanning for witnesses/exits = calculating Crying or trembling = distress, not necessarily aggression
4. VOICE β What's happening with their speech? Loud and fast = adrenaline, fear, anger Quiet and controlled + tense body = potentially more dangerous than someone yelling Repeating the same phrase = stuck in a loop, not processing Slurred or erratic = substance influence (changes approach)
5. CONTEXT β What's the environment? Are there exits? Other people? Objects that could be weapons? Is the person cornered? (Cornered people are more dangerous.) Are there children or vulnerable people present? Is this person known to you, or a stranger?
THREAT LEVEL DECISION: LOW: Person is upset but in control. Approach and de-escalate. MEDIUM: Person is escalating, aggressive posture, yelling. De-escalate but maintain distance and plan your exit. HIGH: Pre-attack indicators present (see below). Do not engage. Create distance. Call for help. Leave if possible.
Step 2: Body positioning and distance
Agent action: Teach physical positioning for de-escalation.
YOUR BODY POSITION β THE MOST IMPORTANT VARIABLE:THE 45-DEGREE ANGLE:
THE REACTIONARY GAP:
HAND POSITION:
YOUR FEET:
THE EXIT PRINCIPLE:
Step 3: Voice and verbal technique
Agent action: Cover how to use voice and words to de-escalate.
VOICE MODULATION β MORE IMPORTANT THAN WORDS:VOLUME: Match their energy at about 70%, then slowly bring yours down. If they're yelling, don't whisper β they'll think you're mocking them. Start slightly below their volume, then gradually decrease. They will unconsciously follow.
PACE: Slow. Down. An agitated person speaks fast. You speak at half their speed. Slow speech signals that no one is in danger, which is the message you're sending to their nervous system.
PITCH: Low. High-pitched voices trigger anxiety. Drop your pitch to the bottom of your comfortable range. Breathe from your diaphragm, not your chest.
TONE: Calm, but not condescending. The difference between de-escalation and patronizing is respect. You're not calming a child. You're talking to a human who is overwhelmed.
VERBAL TECHNIQUES THAT WORK:
1. Acknowledge first, solve second: "I can see you're frustrated, and I want to help." NOT: "Calm down." (Never say "calm down." Ever. It has never once in human history made anyone calm down.)
2. Use their name if you know it: "Mark, I'm listening. Tell me what happened." Names activate the part of the brain that processes identity, which can pull someone out of pure fight-or-flight.
3. Ask open questions to get them talking: "What happened?" "What do you need right now?" Talking uses the prefrontal cortex. Rage uses the amygdala. Getting them to narrate shifts brain activity.
4. Paraphrase back what they said: "So you waited 45 minutes and nobody helped you. That's not okay, and I understand why you're upset." This proves you're listening, which is often the only thing they actually want.
5. Offer limited choices (not unlimited ones): "I can do X or Y for you. Which works better?" Choices give them a sense of control, which is usually what aggression is trying to reclaim.
6. Set limits calmly and clearly when needed: "I want to help you, and I need you to stop yelling so I can. Can we do that?" Not a threat. A boundary stated as a collaboration.
PHRASES TO NEVER USE:
Step 4: Recognizing pre-attack indicators
Agent action: Teach the user when de-escalation has failed and it's time to leave.
PRE-ATTACK INDICATORS β WHEN TO STOP TALKING AND START LEAVING:These are physiological and behavioral signs that a person has moved past anger into the decision to be violent. If you see two or more of these, de-escalation has likely failed.
PHYSICAL SIGNS:
BEHAVIORAL SIGNS:
IF YOU SEE THESE SIGNS: 1. Do NOT turn your back to them. 2. Create distance immediately. Back away at an angle. 3. Put a barrier between you (table, counter, car, anything). 4. Leave the space if you can. 5. Call for help (coworker, security, 911) loudly enough that the aggressor knows others are aware of the situation. 6. If you cannot leave, protect your head and call for help.
YOUR SAFETY IS NOT NEGOTIABLE. No job, no argument, no possession is worth a physical injury. Leave.
Step 5: Scenario-specific protocols
Agent action: Walk through the most common real-world confrontation scenarios.
SCENARIO: ANGRY RETAIL/FOOD SERVICE CUSTOMER
SCENARIO: BAR/NIGHTLIFE CONFRONTATION
SCENARIO: ROAD RAGE
SCENARIO: NEIGHBOR DISPUTE
SCENARIO: FAMILY GATHERING ESCALATION
Step 6: Bystander intervention
Agent action: Cover how to safely intervene in someone else's confrontation.
BYSTANDER INTERVENTION (the 5 D's):DIRECT: Address the aggressor directly. "Hey, that's enough." Only use if you feel safe doing so and the aggressor is not significantly larger/threatening.
DISTRACT: Create a distraction to break the dynamic. Drop something loudly. Ask the victim for directions. Spill a drink. "Excuse me, is this your car? I think it's getting towed." The goal is interruption, not confrontation.
DELEGATE: Get someone else to help. Find security, a manager, another bystander. "Can you call 911? I'm going to stay here and keep an eye on this."
DELAY: If the confrontation has ended, check on the victim after. "Are you okay? Do you need help?" This matters more than people think. Witnessed violence with no follow-up is deeply isolating.
DOCUMENT: Record what's happening (phone video) IF it's safe to do so and you're not the only person who can intervene physically. Evidence helps later. But don't prioritize filming over helping.
CRITICAL: Do not intervene physically unless someone is in immediate danger and no other option exists. You don't know if there's a weapon. You don't know the full situation. Call professionals when possible.
If This Fails
If de-escalation techniques aren't working and the person continues to escalate, leave. Your safety overrides any social obligation to resolve the situation.
If you're in a workplace where confrontations are routine and de-escalation isn't enough, advocate for proper training (CPI or equivalent) through your employer. OSHA requires employers to address workplace violence risks.
If you're dealing with a person in a mental health crisis (delusions, hallucinations, extreme dissociation), standard de-escalation may not apply. Call 988 (Suicide and Crisis Lifeline) or 911 and request a crisis intervention team.
If you've been assaulted, get to safety first. Then: document injuries (photos), get medical attention, file a police report. Contact a victim advocate β most jurisdictions have them through the DA's office at no cost. Rules
Your personal safety is always the top priority β no confrontation is worth a physical injury
Never tell someone to "calm down" β it universally escalates
Never block someone's exit path, even if you want them to stay and talk
Do not touch an agitated person unless they are in immediate physical danger
Do not attempt to physically restrain someone unless you have been trained to do so β improper restraint injures and kills people
Substance-impaired individuals require different approaches β reasoning and logic may not work; focus entirely on environmental management (distance, barriers, calling for help) Tips
The single most effective de-escalation tool is a genuine question asked in a calm voice: "What do you need right now?"
Most angry people aren't angry at you. They're angry at a situation and you're the nearest human. Depersonalizing helps you stay calm.
Your own physiology matters. If your heart rate goes above ~115 bpm, your fine motor skills and decision-making degrade. Breathe deliberately: 4-count inhale, 4-count hold, 4-count exhale.
The 45-degree angle works in everyday conversations too, not just confrontations. Try it in your next difficult conversation with a coworker or family member.
Security guards, bouncers, and psychiatric nurses are the real experts in this field. If you work in a confrontation-heavy environment, ask them what they do. Most will happily teach you.
"You might be right" and "I hear you" are two of the most powerful phrases in conflict. Neither concedes anything. Both validate the other person's existence in the conversation. Agent State
yaml
de_escalation:
user_context:
primary_scenario: null
work_environment: null
frequency_of_confrontations: null
has_de_escalation_training: false
skills_covered:
five_second_assessment: false
body_positioning: false
voice_modulation: false
verbal_techniques: false
pre_attack_indicators: false
scenario_protocols: false
bystander_intervention: false
incidents:
recent_confrontation: null
outcome: null
what_worked: null
what_didnt: null
follow_up:
training_recommendation: null
practice_scenarios_completed: []
Automation Triggers
yaml
triggers:
- name: active_confrontation
condition: "user indicates they are currently in or just exited a confrontation"
action: "Are you safe right now? If you're still in the situation: create distance, keep your hands visible, speak slowly and calmly, and position yourself near an exit. If you've left the situation: take a few minutes to breathe and let your adrenaline come down before making any decisions."- name: workplace_pattern condition: "de_escalation.user_context.frequency_of_confrontations == 'frequent' AND de_escalation.user_context.has_de_escalation_training IS false" action: "You're dealing with confrontations regularly at work without formal training. Your employer should be providing Crisis Prevention Institute (CPI) training or equivalent. It's typically a 1-2 day course that covers everything in this skill with hands-on practice. Want me to help you make the case to your manager?"
- name: post_incident_debrief condition: "de_escalation.incidents.recent_confrontation IS SET AND de_escalation.incidents.outcome IS null" action: "You mentioned a recent confrontation but we didn't debrief on how it went. What happened? What did you try? What worked and what didn't? This kind of review is how the skill actually develops."
- name: scenario_practice condition: "de_escalation.skills_covered.verbal_techniques IS true AND de_escalation.follow_up.practice_scenarios_completed IS EMPTY" action: "You've covered the de-escalation techniques. Want to practice with a scenario? I can describe a situation and you can talk through how you'd handle it β positioning, voice, and words. It's the closest thing to practice without a real confrontation." ``