What âEmotional Floodingâ Really MeansâAnd How to Handle It
What âEmotional Floodingâ Really MeansâAnd How to Handle It
Angela HauptFri, April 10, 2026 at 1:32 PM UTC
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âPhoto-Illustration by TIME (Source Images: Yana IskayevaâGetty Images, Marsell Gorska GautierâGetty Images)
At some point in the middle of an argumentâor any other high-stress situationâsomething short-circuits. You know the feeling: you stop being able to think, listen, or speak calmly. Your body takes over and your brain essentially goes dark. Itâs called âemotional flooding,â and it transcends the ordinary experience of being upset or overwhelmed.
Like countless psychology terms before it, emotional flooding is making the rounds on social media. Yet it describes something experts have long understood: a state of nervous-system overwhelm so complete that your prefrontal cortexâyour brainâs rational, regulated adultâtemporarily shuts down. âItâs like the adult in your brain says, âCatch you later, Iâm gonna step out for a minute,ââ says Kati Morton, a marriage and family therapist in Austin. Whatâs left is pure survival mode: fight, flight, or freeze.
We asked experts to break down whatâs happening in the body and brain when emotional flooding takes over.
What emotional flooding isâand isnât
The term âemotional floodingâ was popularized by psychologist John Gottman, who used it to describe a state of intense physiological arousal during conflictâone that can make it difficult to think clearly, process information, or communicate effectively.
What makes flooding so disorienting is that it isn't purely psychological, says Mia Soviero, a neuroscience researcher whoâs the founder and CEO of Research Girl, a STEM education nonprofit. âItâs not the same as just feeling really upsetâitâs not just an emotional quality,â she says. âThereâs also a physiological threshold thatâs being crossed.â
When youâre flooded, your amygdalaâyour brainâs threat detectorâbecomes overactive, and your sympathetic nervous system kicks into high gear. That surge of activation makes your prefrontal cortex less able to regulate emotions. âYour vagus nerve becomes dysregulated, your heart rate increases, your breathing becomes shallow, and your body reacts as though thereâs a real, present danger,â Soviero says. âYou arenât able to think clearly because your prefrontal cortex sort of goes offline.â
Krista Jordan, a clinical psychologist in Austin, describes it more bluntly. Emotional flooding âoutstrips your ability to use the smarter part of your brain,â she says. The result is that everything collapses into one-dimensional thinking: As she puts it, âThis person sucks, Iâm being abandoned, I hate you.â
When youâre sad or angry in a normal sense, you can still access your thoughtsâyou can reason with yourself, consider another perspective, and talk yourself down. Flooding forecloses all of that. âOnce youâre flooded, the person in front of you could even start saying the thing you wished they would have said to begin with, and you canât even process it,â says Dena DiNardo, a clinical psychologist in Philadelphia. âItâs like being unreachable.â
Read More: Do You Really Store Stress in Your Body?
Flooding is also distinct from a panic attack, though the two can overlap. Panic attacks are sudden surges of fear or doom that often arise without a clear trigger. Emotional flooding, by contrast, typically has a more identifiable source: a conflict, perceived slight, or any situation the brain registers as threatening or overwhelming. âPanic attacks can include flooding symptoms,â Soviero notes, âbut they donât have to.â And while panic is specific to anxiety, flooding can be driven by anger, frustration, sadness, or virtually any other emotion pushed past a breaking point.
Itâs also worth knowing what flooding is not. As the term spreads on social media, Soviero cautions against applying it too broadly. âIf you can still argue, negotiate a boundary, or hold a conversation, itâs likely that youâre not floodedâyouâre just upset,â she says. Flooding has a distinct physiological signature. Using it to describe any intense emotion, she adds, does a disservice to the conceptâthe same way ânarcissistâ and âgaslightingâ have lost precision from overuse.
Whoâs most prone to emotional flooding
Not everyone floods with the same frequency or intensity, and the reasons are often complex. Biology, personal history, and environment all play a role, and they interact in ways that arenât always obvious. âYou could have two people live through exactly the same thing, and one person becomes flooded and the other doesnât,â DiNardo says.
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Early life experiences are a major factor. Growing up in a stressful or unpredictable environmentâperhaps due to poverty, violence, or a parentâs mental illnessâshapes the developing brain in ways that prime it for flooding. Sometimes, people in these situations â have a less facilitated frontal cortex and a more active limbic system,â Jordan says.
People with panic disorder, PTSD, or borderline personality disorder may also find that they enter this state more easily, since emotional dysregulation is already part of the picture. âItâs like our teapot is almost already boiling,â Morton says. âSo if we encounter something that triggers it, weâre going to overflow.â
Dr. Alex Dimitriu, a psychiatrist in Menlo Park, Calif., says the bodyâs baseline state plays an essential role. He uses a skiing metaphor with his patients: Your psychology is your technique, and your biology is the slope. âWhen the terrain is gentle, almost anyone can stay upright,â he says. "But when the slope steepensâthrough poor sleep, chronic stress, hormonal shifts, or untreated anxietyâeven the best technique falls apart.â Research supports his point: After even one night of poor sleep, the brainâs amygdala overreacts to negative stimuli by about 60%.
How to cope in the moment and over time
You canât reason your way out of emotional flooding. The usual cognitive strategiesâtelling yourself to calm down or trying to think through whatâs happeningâsimply wonât work. You have to calm your body first.
Soviero recommends square breathing, also called box breathing: inhale for four seconds, hold for four seconds, exhale for four seconds, hold again. Doing so activates the vagus nerve and nudges the nervous system from fight-or-flight back toward rest. Cold water is another optionâdunking your face into a bowl of it triggers the mammalian dive reflex, a physiological response that slows the heart rate and interrupts the bodyâs stress response.
If you have some privacy, Morton suggests stomping your feet. âIt gives that sped-up energy thatâs running around your nervous system an outlet,â she says. Children do something similar when they throw tantrumsâall that floor-pounding and arm-flailing is the bodyâs attempt to physically discharge what itâs holding. Another option: Hugging a pillow tightly, or even lying face down, can help your body settle, Soviero says.
Read More: The 1-Minute Trick to Calming Down Your Nervous System
In-the-moment strategies only go so far. The more powerful work happens between floods, not during them. âThereâs not a lot that works in the moment, to be honest,â DiNardo says. âItâs really important to look at this when youâre not in that stateâwhen youâre calm and regulated.â Over time, paying attention to what flooding feels like, and what tends to set it off, can help you start to recognize it sooner. The next time it happens, you may be able to catch it earlier.
The best ways to prevent emotional overwhelm include protecting your sleep, setting limits to avoid chronic overstimulation, and meeting what Dimitriu calls your âbasic animal needsâ: nutrition, movement, rest, socialization, and time alone. âThese non-medical interventions are always the first step in my practice,â he says. "When the foundation is solid, everything else works better.â If you find yourself flooding regularly in response to everyday stressorsânot extreme eventsâconsider it a meaningful signal that may point to unresolved trauma or chronic stress. Therapy can help.
How to support a loved one
Getting swept up in someone elseâs emotional flood is its own challenging experienceâand most instinctive responses make things worse, not better. âItâs frightening,â DiNardo says. âPeople are scared. They donât understand.â Trying to reason with someone whoâs flooding, defending yourself, or escalating in return will likely go nowhere. Once someone is flooded, she notes, theyâre essentially unreachable until their nervous system settles.
If youâve previously talked with your loved one about their tendency to flood, itâs OK to gently name what youâre seeing. Say something like, âYou seem a little overwhelmed,â Morton suggests, and then give them space. âJust say, âIâm going to give you a minute. Let me know when you feel better.ââ If you think you may have contributed to the situation, a brief, non-defensive acknowledgment can help. What shouldnât you do? Offer coping strategies unless theyâre explicitly asked for. âThat could just make it worse,â Morton says.
Read More: The Worst Things to Say to Someone With AnxietyâAnd What to Say Instead
Remember, too, that flooding isnât a character flaw or a sign that something is permanently broken. Itâs your body doing what itâs designed to doâresponding to a perceived threat, even if that threat isnât actually dangerous. âEveryoneâs capable of being flooded,â Jordan says. âWeâve all had this experience.â
Source: âAOL Breakingâ