We reach for familiar phrases when things feel painful, confusing, or out of our control.
“Everything happens for a reason” is one many of us have said – often with the best intentions. It’s meant to offer comfort, perspective, or reassurance at a moment that feels senseless.
But when someone is hurting, overwhelmed, or has been blindsided, this phrase often lands differently than we intend. Through a nervous-system lens, it can create pressure instead of comfort, and distance instead of connection.
Here’s why this familiar expression doesn’t always help – especially in workplace settings.
Why We Say It
At its core, “Everything happens for a reason” is an attempt to make meaning out of uncertainty.
We want to soothe someone who’s struggling – often reaching for what I call “Verbal Kleenex” in an attempt to soften the moment. This impulse is human. But the impact can be more complex.
Why It Backfires
When we’re in distress, meaning-making requires more emotional and physiological capacity than we may have in the moment. Our nervous system may be activated – overwhelmed, threatened, or simply trying to process what just happened.
In that state, the phrase can feel like:
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- a push to “be okay” more quickly than we’re ready for
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- a signal that our feelings need to be minimized or reframed
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- a subtle suggestion that discomfort shouldn’t be expressed
Instead of offering comfort, it can shut down conversation.
The nervous system isn’t looking for explanations when it’s in pain or uncertainty.
It’s looking for acknowledgment, steadiness, and presence.
Meaning only becomes accessible once our body feels safe again.
How This Shows Up at Work
This phrase appears in professional settings more often than we realize: During layoffs, restructuring, missed promotions, project failures, unexpected changes, lost clients, or moments of interpersonal conflict.
Leaders might say it to soften a difficult message. Colleagues might offer it in an attempt to be supportive. But at work, where power dynamics and psychological safety matter, it often has unintended consequences.
Instead of creating comfort, it can:
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- shut down legitimate emotions
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- signal that concerns shouldn’t be voiced
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- bypass the real impact of what happened
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- create distance in relationships
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- make people feel unseen or dismissed
A workplace becomes safer – and more human – when people feel able to have their reactions without needing to immediately make meaning of them. This is at the heart of what we call The Nervous System Era of Work.
What to Say Instead
Support doesn’t require answers. It requires presence.
Here are alternatives that create space rather than pressure:
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- “I’m so sorry this happened.”
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- “I can see this is really hard.”
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- “You don’t need to make sense of this right now.”
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- “I’m here, and I’m listening.”
These responses acknowledge the moment without trying to reframe it – and they’re part of a broader shift we explore each week in our Language to Leave Behind series. They regulate the nervous system instead of overwhelming it, and they build trust rather than erode it.
The Nervous System Lens
Explanations are for the mind. Safety is for the body.
When we offer reassurance that bypasses someone’s immediate experience, the body doesn’t feel more grounded – it feels more alone. But when we offer presence, acknowledgment, and calm, the body experiences co-regulation. That’s what makes psychological safety real.
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Small language shifts can transform how we communicate.
And when we lead with presence, workplaces feel more human.
If you’d like to receive weekly trauma-informed language insights – including phrases to leave behind and what to say instead – you can join the Language to Leave Behind email series here:
