Learn to master your poker face and emotional control. Discover how the amygdala and basal ganglia affect composure and how to stay steady under pressure.

Maintaining composure is not about becoming a robot or suppressing your humanity—it is about mastering the gap between that initial spark and your outward reaction.
Techniques for maintaining a neutral and composed facial expression in challenging social situations, specifically when feeling triggered or disapproving, covering professional settings, family dynamics, heated arguments, and unexpected social encounters.







Maintaining a poker face is challenging because your brain is wired to leak emotions through subcortical structures like the amygdala and basal ganglia. These areas operate below your conscious awareness, causing facial muscles to react to emotional triggers before your logical brain can intervene. It creates a constant race between fast, automatic emotional circuits and your slower executive control, often making your face broadcast frustrations before you can find the right words to respond.
The amygdala and basal ganglia are part of the brain's fast-acting emotional pathways that trigger immediate physical reactions to perceived threats. When you face a performance review or a heated argument, these structures send signals to your facial muscles almost instantly. Because these pathways function faster than your executive control, your internal hurricane often becomes visible externally, making it difficult to stay composed without specific cognitive and physical anchors to bridge the gap.
The most effective way to stay calm is not to simply freeze your face or suppress your humanity, but to change how your brain processes the initial threat. By mastering the gap between an emotional spark and your outward reaction, you can use cognitive anchors to remain steady. This episode of Composure Under Pressure explores how to move beyond acting like a robot and instead focus on mastering executive control to manage your brain's automatic responses.
Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco
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Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco
