Overreacting? Use This 5-Step Schema-Informed Reset Plan (original) (raw)

Take-Away Trio

How to reset after overreactingDo you often find yourself reacting more strongly than the situation seems to warrant? Like something small suddenly feels overwhelming, personal, or hard to shake?

These moments are often called triggers or schemas: situations that activate older emotional patterns from past experiences.

In this guide, I’ll explore schemas and provide a schema-informed reset plan to help you ground yourself when old emotional patterns are triggered.

Before you continue, we thought you might like to download our five positive psychology tools for free. These engaging, science-based exercises will help you effectively deal with difficult circumstances and give you the tools to improve the resilience of your clients, students, or employees.

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What Are Schemas, and Why Do They Get Triggered?

In simple terms, schemas are patterns developed in early life that shape how you see yourself, other people, and the world (Young et al., 2003).

They continue to guide how you interpret situations, how you feel, and how you respond—like shortcuts that allow you to make sense of things quickly.

According to schema therapy, when core emotional needs like feeling safe, loved, understood, supported, or free to be yourself aren’t consistently met in childhood, schemas develop as ways to cope with those early experiences (Young et al., 2003).

For example, a child might learn that love must be earned through good behavior or achievement. This can manifest as people-pleasing or perfectionism schemas, which help them cope at the time but can become problematic.

Schemas are triggered in emotional situations that echo earlier experiences, especially when those situations involve rejection, criticism, uncertainty, or emotional distance.

Your reaction to these might be immediate and intense because you’re responding not just to what’s happening now but also to what it means based on your past (Dadomo et al., 2016).

A Schema-Informed Reset Plan: A Step-by-Step Guide

How to do a schema resetThis emotional reset plan is designed for moments when old emotional patterns are triggered. The aim is to interrupt the spiral so you can respond with more awareness and self-compassion.

In schema therapy, these emotional responses are linked to different types of schemas, which we’ll explore more in the next post. For now, it’s most important to recognize what being triggered actually feels like in everyday life.

When a schema is activated, the emotional reaction often feels bigger or more overwhelming than the situation itself. You might suddenly feel:

In these moments, people often react in protective ways, such as:

While these are natural responses to discomfort, they can keep the patterns alive. Having a schema reset plan can provide a pause to interrupt the spiral and give you more space to choose how to respond.

Step 1: Name What’s Happening

The first step is to simply notice what’s happening so you have a brief pause before automatically reacting.

There’s no need to analyze it in detail or understand exactly what’s going on. But try to name the experience, as this can create a small but effective shift. For example:

“I’m feeling triggered right now.”
“I’m experiencing the ‘I’m not good enough’ feeling again.”

Research suggests that putting feelings into words can reduce their emotional intensity and support emotional regulation (Lieberman et al., 2007). It also reminds you that a pattern is being activated and that the feelings don’t necessarily reflect reality.

Step 2: Ground the Body

When a schema is triggered, you often feel it in your body first. It can be very intense, making the ensuing thoughts and emotions much more convincing.

So, before you try to think your way out of it, try to ground your body. For example:

These are emotional grounding strategies based on mindfulness and have been shown to reduce emotional reactivity (Hölzel et al., 2011).

Step 3: Spot the Old Feeling

Once you’ve named the experience and grounded yourself, see if you can recognize what the feeling reminds you of or where it might come from. Even a sense of “This feels old” or “This feels like an old reaction” can help you separate the past from now.

Recognizing that emotional responses are linked to earlier experiences can reduce the intensity of the current situation.

Step 4: Reality Check the Trigger

Reality check the triggerWhen you’re triggered, the emotional reaction can feel very valid and true. So, this step is about considering the evidence without dismissing your feelings.

You might write down what happened with only the facts. Then ask yourself, “What else could this mean? If someone else were in this situation, how might they see it?”

For example, someone being quieter than usual might mean they have something on their mind, rather than that you’ve done something wrong.

This is similar to cognitive reappraisal, which has been shown to help regulate emotions by widening the lens and reinterpreting situations in a more balanced way (Stover et al., 2024).

Step 5: Choose a Response

Now that you’ve created a bit of space, you have more choice over how to respond.

Something that I find helpful is to think of my future self: How would I respond if I were feeling calm? How can I respond in a way that I would be happy with when I feel calm again?

Then consider what you might need right now beneath this reaction. Often, these emotional responses are connected to unmet emotional needs such as reassurance, rest, connection, or boundaries. How can you look after your needs?

Choose something that is helpful and aligned with your values.

A Take-Home Message

When you feel triggered, it doesn’t mean there’s something wrong with you, but that something old is being stirred up.

A schema-informed reset plan helps you to name what’s happening, ground your body, and gently challenge your thoughts so you can interrupt the pattern and create some space to respond differently.

You don’t have to get it perfectly right, but the more you practice pausing and resetting, the easier it will be to change the pattern over time.

What’s next?

What always triggers you? Which scenarios, people, or circumstances make you lose your temper instantly? Let’s make use of the schema pattern finder to help you identify repeating patterns.

We hope you found some insight in this article. Don’t forget to download our five positive psychology tools for free.

Frequently Asked Questions

A sign of being triggered is a sense of familiarity or feeling like, “This always happens to me.” Also, it often feels like a reaction more intense than the situation warrants. It can feel like a sudden shift in mood or a physical reaction, such as a racing heart or tight chest. The thoughts can be quite extreme given the situation, for example, thinking, “They don’t care about me” when someone doesn’t reply immediately.

That can be normal because once the nervous system is highly activated, it can take a while to return to a calmer state (Porges, 2007). When you’re triggered, try not to force yourself to calm down. Instead, communicate to your mind and body that you’re safe. You can do this through grounding techniques, such as slowing your exhalation.

Anna Drescher, is a mental health writer and editor with a background in psychology and psychotherapy. In addition to her writing and editorial work, Anna is a certified hypnotherapist and meditation teacher. She has extensive experience working within the mental health sector in various roles including support work, managing a service user involvement and coproduction project, and working as an assistant psychologist within the NHS in England.

Anna Drescher