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Episode 171 - Occupational Safety - Don't lose emotional control
Episode 171

Episode 171 - Occupational Safety - Don't lose emotional control

The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast

August 11, 20243m 3s

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Show Notes

Episode 171 focuses on one of the most critical — and often overlooked — leadership skills: emotional regulation. Dr. Ayers explains that when leaders lose emotional control, even briefly, it sends shockwaves through the team. People become guarded, stop reporting issues, and shift into self‑protection mode. Emotional control isn’t about suppressing feelings — it’s about choosing responses that build trust instead of fear.

  🔑 Key Takeaways 1. Leaders’ Emotions Set the Tone

Employees watch leaders closely. When leaders react with:

  • Anger

  • Frustration

  • Impatience

  • Sarcasm

…it creates tension and shuts down communication. A calm leader creates a calm team.

  2. Losing Emotional Control Damages Psychological Safety

A single outburst can cause:

  • Reduced reporting

  • Hesitation to speak up

  • Fear of making mistakes

  • Avoidance of the leader

People won’t share concerns with someone who reacts unpredictably.

  3. Emotional Control Is a Skill, Not a Personality Trait

Dr. Ayers emphasizes that leaders can learn to:

  • Pause before responding

  • Breathe and reset

  • Ask curious questions

  • Separate emotion from action

  • Focus on understanding before reacting

These habits prevent emotional hijacking.

  4. Your First Reaction Matters Most

The initial response to:

  • A mistake

  • A near miss

  • A concern

  • A disagreement

…sets the tone for the entire interaction. A calm, curious first reaction builds trust. A reactive one destroys it.

  5. Emotional Control Builds Credibility

Leaders who stay composed:

  • Earn respect

  • Build stronger relationships

  • Encourage reporting

  • Reinforce expectations consistently

  • Create a stable environment

Consistency is a form of leadership safety.

  6. Emotional Outbursts Are Leadership Failures

Dr. Ayers is clear: When leaders lose control, it’s not “just a moment.” It’s a message — and usually the wrong one.

  🧩 Big Message

Episode 171 reinforces that emotional control is a core safety leadership competency. When leaders stay calm, curious, and composed — especially under pressure — they create a culture where people feel safe to speak up, report issues, and work openly. Emotional control protects people just as much as procedures do.