How To Deal With Emotional Triggers

Insight Beyond Treatment

At Next Level Behavioral Health, we believe meaningful change starts with perspective, not just protocols.

That philosophy is directly led by Amanda Marino, whose voice in behavioral health extends beyond clinical settings into leadership, culture, and personal growth.

Through keynote speaking and live events, Amanda explores the deeper themes that show up in recovery, family systems, and life transitions: authenticity, resilience, accountability, and the courage to change. Her work invites audiences to move past labels and into honest conversations that create lasting impact.

Explore Amanda Marino’s Work

 “Everything you do is triggered by an emotion of either desire or fear.

- Brian Tracy

 An emotional trigger can be words, a person, a situation, or an experience that incites an almost immediate reaction in an individual. Negative triggers that stimulate anger, pain, stress, and sadness can be hard to deal with.

However, with some simple steps, you can control your reaction to those triggers. And by the time you reach the sixth step, you’ll be able to know your triggers by the sight of them and control your reactions to them.

  • Catch yourself after a trigger happens
    When you find a situation or something triggering you to be angry or sad, or feeling anything extreme, first of all, try to understand what caused it. By knowing your trigger, you have fought half the battle. Next up is how to tame it.


  • Acknowledge your feelings
    Whatever feelings you get when you face an emotional trigger, accept them. Ask yourself why that word or that person made you feel that. Know that it’s okay to feel those emotions at that moment.


  • Deep breaths and compassionate words
    To control your reactions to a trigger, perform deep breaths. Talk to your inner child with compassion.


  • Meditate
    Regular meditation can help enhance focus on your soul. So, you can find your trigger points faster and combat them.


  • Catch yourself in the process of getting triggered
    Practicing the above four steps over and over again, you’ll start to spot triggers the moment it happens.


  • Catch yourself before a trigger happens and avoid it
    With time, if you continue the above steps, you’ll be able to know spot a trigger before it happens and control your reactions to situations.

 

Affirmation:
My emotional triggers teach me to grow beyond them. I accept them for they are and promise to face them head-on.

A Voice Shaping the Conversation

The topics explored here—change, self-awareness, recovery, and growth—are the same themes Amanda Marino brings to audiences nationwide through speaking engagements and live events.

Known for her appearances on A&E’s Intervention and Digital Addiction, Amanda speaks to organizations, communities, and leadership teams about navigating adversity, embracing vulnerability, and building lives rooted in purpose. Her message resonates far beyond treatment, offering insight that applies to families, professionals, and anyone standing at a crossroads.

Learn More About Amanda’s Speaking & Events
Blog & news

Blogs And Articles About Mental Health

Business Solution / by David Dolean
A Step-by-Step Guide to
Invitational Interventions
.
Business Solution / by David Dolean
Mental Health
Intervention Guide
View More