How to Decompress After a Crisis Day: What Actually Works and What Just Delays the Impact
You know the kind of day I mean. Not a hard day — principals have those constantly and they have learned to navigate them. The other kind. The kind where something happened that required every leadership resource you had, and by the time the building cleared and you locked the door you felt scraped out.
A student crisis that pulled you into a situation that will stay with you. A staff explosion in front of witnesses that required you to hold the room together while your own reaction was happening somewhere underneath the performance. A parent encounter that crossed into something personal. A district conversation that confirmed something you had been afraid was true.
You know this day. The question is: what do you do tonight that does not make it worse?
There is a version of decompressing that is actually just delaying — numbing the impact rather than processing it. That version feels like relief. It is not. The impact arrives later, with compounded interest.
What Delays Instead of Releases
Scrolling. The phone is a pacifier for the activated nervous system — it provides a steady stream of new inputs that occupy the cognitive bandwidth that would otherwise be processing the day. The day does not get processed. It gets postponed. You go to sleep with the scroll in your recent history and the unprocessed crisis sitting exactly where you left it, waiting for 3am.
Telling the story repeatedly. There is a version of recounting the day that is processing — talking through what happened with someone who can help you make meaning of it. And there is a version that is replaying — running the same loop of the incident, the feeling, the what-ifs, without moving through it to any resolution. Most principals, telling the story to their partner at the kitchen table, are replaying more than processing.
Pushing through. Working late after a crisis day under the theory that staying productive prevents the feelings from arriving. The feelings arrive anyway. They arrive with the exhaustion of a depleted system and less capacity to handle them.
What Actually Works
Physical movement, within the hour of leaving the building if possible. Not for fitness. For the body. The nervous system that has been running in crisis mode for hours has actual physiological residue — cortisol, adrenaline, the physical signatures of stress. Movement metabolizes them in a way that sitting does not.
A written download. Before you re-enter your personal life, five to ten minutes of writing everything that is open. Not journaling for insight — just emptying the cache. Every open loop, every unresolved question, every lingering feeling about the day. Written out, on paper or in a document you close. The brain releases what it has written down in a way that it does not release what it is still holding.
One real conversation — with someone who does not need the situation explained in detail, who simply hears that it was hard and responds to you as a person rather than an administrator. This is different from telling the story. It is being witnessed. It is short. And it matters enormously.
The Morning After
The real test of whether last night’s decompression worked is whether you walk into the building the next morning with access to yourself — your patience, your perspective, your capacity for the work — or whether you walk in carrying last night.
If you walk in carrying it, the decompression was incomplete. Note that. Not as a failure — as information about what you need to build more of, around this specific kind of day.
Every principal has a type of crisis day that costs the most. Know yours. Build the recovery specifically around it. That is not self-indulgence. That is sustainability — and the school depends on it.
If this post spoke to you —
The Principal Playbook
The Playbook includes your personal sustainability plan — because a reset is not just about the school.
Built for the principal who had that kind of day and needs to know what to do tonight. No fluff. No district-approved language. Just the real work.