Sunday, June 14, 2026

Stop, Record, and Scream: What One Roadside Karen Taught Me About Treating Humans Like Humans Common courtesy isn’t dead—it’s just buried under phones, assumptions, and our own triggers. Here’s the raw story, the lesson, and simple ways to do better.




The gravel crunched under our tires as my husband and I turned the Jeep around on that long, winding private road deep in the Northwoods. We’d just dropped off another package after a solid day—50+ deliveries, laughs in the car, time together that felt like a win in our busy, stretched-thin lives. The sun was dipping, the air smelled like pine and earth, and for a moment, everything felt right.

Then the screaming started.

“STOP! Do you know how fast you’re going?!”

A woman came barreling toward us from that massive house on the right, phone already out and recording. Her voice cut through the quiet like a chainsaw. Dogs barking somewhere. My husband tensed—there’d been a guy who ran inside when she flagged us down. We’re in gun country, hunting territory, signs on our car, bear spray in the console for the “you never know” moments out here in the woods. He reached for it. I felt my chest tighten, that familiar fight-or-flight surge.

I tried at first. Calm. “I’m sorry—there weren’t any posted speeds. I didn’t think we were going too fast.”

But then came the insults, the assumptions about our intelligence, our right to be there. And yeah, as a substance abuse counselor with lived experience, my mouth got ahead of my brain: “You look a little inebriated. Had a bit too much to drink?”

Snarky. Unprofessional. Human. I immediately regretted it. In that split second, I’d let her pull me into the mud. We drove away, my hands shaking on the wheel, replaying it for the next 15 minutes. Why did one rude encounter threaten to wreck a good day? Why do we default to yelling, recording, and escalating instead of talking like people?

The Phone as Power Move
In our culture, hitting record has become the new “I’ve got backup.” It shifts the dynamic instantly—from two humans trying to solve a problem to performer and audience, with potential viral humiliation on the line. Studies on surveillance and recording show it ramps up self-consciousness, anxiety, and defensiveness while killing spontaneity and real dialogue. People stop being themselves and start performing for the lens. It doesn’t de-escalate; it entrenches sides.

We all feel more “powerful” with a camera rolling, but it rarely leads to understanding. It feeds the outrage machine instead of resolution.

Why We Lose Our Cool (And How Brains Betray Us)
That roadside moment lit up my nervous system like a Christmas tree. Heart racing, words flying before thinking. Sound familiar?

This is classic: our amygdala (the brain’s alarm system) hijacks rational thinking when we feel threatened. Anger feels protective, but it often backfires. As someone in recovery and counseling, I know this territory well—triggers, self-sabotage, the stories we tell ourselves in the heat.

I let her behavior define my response instead of choosing mine. Big mistake.

Simple CBT-Style Breakdown: Pause, Name It, Choose Better
Here’s how to break it down in the moment, mile-by-mile (or millimeter-by-millimeter, as we say in recovery). Keep it stupid simple:

Notice the Trigger (Awareness): Feel your body—tight chest, clenched jaw, racing thoughts? Name it out loud or in your head: “I’m getting pissed because she assumed the worst about me.” This creates a tiny gap between stimulus and reaction.

Breathe and Ground (Physiological Reset): Slow breath in for 4, hold 4, out for 6. Feel your feet on the ground or hands on the steering wheel. This tells your nervous system: “We’re safe enough to think.” Not “calm down” (which pisses people off more), but actual calm.

Cognitive Restructuring (Challenge the Story): Ask: “What’s the evidence? What’s another way to see this?” Her dogs were loose. She felt unsafe on her road. Maybe she’s had bad experiences with delivery drivers. Maybe she’s having a terrible day. Doesn’t excuse yelling, but it humanizes her. My snap-back? That was my old pattern of defensiveness talking.

Respond, Don’t React (De-Escalation Basics):

Use “I” statements: “I hear you’re concerned about speed on this road.”

Listen first: “Tell me what’s going on.”

Give choices or empathy: “I want to make sure we’re respecting your space—how can we fix this?”

Set limits calmly if needed: “I’m happy to talk, but yelling and recording isn’t helping.”

Verbal de-escalation isn’t weakness—it’s skill. Stay at an angle, open posture, calm tone. Respect space. Focus on feelings, not just “facts.”

Creative Outside-the-Box Tips for Real Life
The “Human Mirror”: Briefly reflect their concern back: “It sounds like you’ve dealt with fast drivers here before, and it’s stressing you out with the dogs out.” People de-escalate when they feel seen.

Humor as Pressure Valve (use sparingly, read the room): A light “Whoa, we’re not trying to race the dogs!” can disarm if the vibe allows. Otherwise, skip it.

Exit Strategy: Sometimes the best communication is “I can see this is heated—let’s both take a breath and I’ll follow up if needed.” Then leave safely.

Post-Game Reflection: In the car or at home, replay it. What did I do well? What sucked? What will I practice next time? This builds the “muscle” like any recovery skill.

Phone Culture Reset: Next time someone records, gently: “I’d rather talk this out person-to-person. Phones make it harder.” Or just disengage. Not every battle needs your energy.

Treating Humans Like Humans: Dignity Over Drama
At the core, this is about dignity—the inherent worth of every messy person, even the yelling one on a dirt road or the delivery driver who snaps back. Research shows societies that prioritize respect and dignity build more trust, better conflict resolution, and stronger communities.

We don’t have to agree. We don’t even have to like each other. But assuming the worst, weaponizing phones, and skipping basic courtesy erodes the fabric that lets us all coexist.

I made a fool of myself today. I owned it. Progress is progress—own the mess, learn the lesson, do better next time. My husband and I are still talking about it. It didn’t ruin the day; it sharpened the point.

Next time you’re in a “Karen” moment (as the giver or receiver), pause. Breathe. Remember the person in front of you is a full human with their own invisible battles. Speak like you want to be spoken to. Listen like it matters. Because it does.

What about you?

Got a story of a moment where communication went sideways—and what you took from it?

Drop it in the comments. Let’s build better habits together.

I’m Learning to Let Go of Control.

 ðŸ”¥ Badass Affirmation of the Day 🔥

I’m Learning to Let Go of Control.

I used to think that if I could control everything—my emotions, my people, my outcomes, my image—I’d finally feel safe.
But control? It’s an illusion that kept me running on empty, trapped in fear.

Now, I’m learning the hardest, bravest truth:
I can feel the fear without freezing.
I can sit with uncertainty without losing myself.
I can trust that whatever comes, I’ll handle it.

Letting go isn’t giving up.
It’s making room for peace.
Choosing presence over panic.
It’s radical trust—in myself and the process.

Progress is progress—mile or millimeter.
Any forward motion counts… even when it feels like surrender.

Drop a “💪” if you’re practicing letting go of what you can’t control.

You don’t have to hold the whole world together.
You only have to hold yourself through it.
And you are damn strong enough to do that.

I see you.
I’m right here, loosening my grip alongside you.

ProgressIsProgress #LettingGo #BadassRecovery #AnyForwardMotion