We’ve all been there. You’re at a dinner party or in a meeting, feeling like the conversation is going well, and then you say something that sucks the air right out of the room.
You didn’t mean to be rude. You thought you were being helpful, sympathetic or just honest. But the person across from you has shut down.
Specific phrases nearly everyone uses can instantly damage our likability. They’re communication traps I see people fall into every day — and ones I’ve been guilty of myself.
We often use filler phrases or automatic responses without realizing they signal dismissal, arrogance or a lack of empathy.
If you want to build better connections — whether with your spouse, your boss or your neighbor — you need to purge these phrases from your vocabulary immediately.
1. No offense, but …
This is the grandfather of all passive-aggressive qualifiers. When you start a sentence with “no offense,” you’re virtually guaranteeing that what comes next will be offensive. It’s a pass people try to give themselves to be critical without consequences.
Psychology experts note that this phrase puts the listener on the defensive before you have even made your point. Instead of softening the blow, it warns the other person to put their guard up.
If you have constructive feedback to give, just give it kindly and directly. If you’re about to insult someone, just don’t.
2. I know exactly how you feel
We say this because we want to connect. We want to show empathy. But usually, this phrase accomplishes the exact opposite.
By saying “I know exactly how you feel,” you’re shifting the spotlight from their pain to your experience. According to psychological research, this is a form of conversational narcissism. You’re telling the other person that their unique struggle is just a rerun of something you have already conquered.
For a better approach, try saying, “I can’t imagine how hard that must be,” or simply, “Tell me more.”
3. Calm down
In the history of human communication, telling someone to calm down has never once resulted in them calming down. It usually has the effect of throwing gasoline on a fire.
This phrase is invalidating. It signals that you’re uncomfortable with the other person’s emotions and you want them to stop inconveniently having them.
As noted by emotional intelligence experts, this phrase escalates conflict because it dismisses the validity of the other person’s reaction.
4. You look tired
I have had people say this to me when I felt perfectly fine, and it instantly ruined my mood. While you might think you’re showing concern for their well-being, the subtext is, “You look terrible.”
Unless you are a close friend talking to someone who is clearly ill, avoid commenting on people’s physical state of exhaustion. It adds no value to the conversation and only serves to make the other person self-conscious.
5. At least …
- “I lost my job.” / “At least you have your health.”
- “My car broke down.” / “At least you didn’t crash.”
This is known as minimizing. You might think you’re offering perspective, but you’re actually stripping the other person of the right to feel bad.
Mental health advocates point out that this phrase communicates that someone’s current struggle isn’t valid enough to warrant sympathy.
6. Whatever
If you want to end a relationship, this is the quickest way to do it. “Whatever” is a verbal door slam. It’s dismissive and disrespectful. It tells the other person that their thoughts are not worth your energy and that you are checking out of the interaction.
This kind of dismissal is a major red flag in relationships, similar to the financial secrecy that often breaks couples apart.
7. To be honest …
I have always hated this phrase. When you preface a statement with “to be honest” or “honestly,” you’re subtly implying that everything you said prior to that moment was a lie.
It also often serves as another version of “no offense,” preparing the listener for a harsh truth that you’re dressing up as a virtue.
Being honest is always the best policy, but you don’t need to announce it every time you speak.
8. You always … or you never
These are called absolute statements, and they’re poison for arguments.
- “You never do the dishes.”
- “You always interrupt me.”
These statements are rarely factually true, and they immediately trigger a rebuttal. The other person will stop listening to your valid complaint and start searching their memory for the one time they did the dishes just to prove you wrong.
This is a subtle form of disrespect that erodes trust over time. Mel Robbins notes that when someone dismisses your feelings or interrupts constantly, it damages your confidence and the relationship.
Stick to specifics: “It frustrated me when you didn’t do the dishes yesterday.”
9. It is what it is
The use of this phrase has become a pandemic in corporate America. While it can sometimes signal acceptance of a difficult situation, it’s more often used as a lazy way to shut down discussion.
When a concern is raised and you respond with, “It is what it is,” you are saying there’s no point in trying to fix it. It signals apathy.
If you hear this often from leadership, it might be a sign of a toxic work culture. If there truly is no solution, explain why, rather than using a cliche to brush it off.
10. With all due respect
Just like “no offense,” this phrase is almost always followed by something completely disrespectful. It is a formal way of saying, “I think you’re wrong, and I’m about to tell you why in a condescending manner.”
If you disagree with someone, you can do it without the throat-clearing. Try, “I see it differently,” or “I have a different perspective on that.”
