Verbal Judo - The Gentle Art Of Persuasion Apr 2026

He didn’t argue. He didn’t command. He asked and paraphrased . The jumper felt heard—not as a problem, but as a person. That moment of being seen is often enough to step back from the edge. Some critics say Verbal Judo is manipulation. Thompson’s sharp rejoinder: Manipulation serves the speaker. Persuasion serves the relationship.

| Avoid This | Replace With | Why | |------------|--------------|-----| | “Calm down” | “Take your time” | “Calm down” always does the opposite. | | “You need to…” | “Help me understand…” | “You need” sounds like a command. | | “That’s not my problem” | “I can’t solve that, but here’s what I can do” | First dismisses; second redirects. | | “Why did you do that?” | “What led to this situation?” | “Why” implies blame. “What” invites narrative. | One of Thompson’s classic training scenarios: A man is standing on the edge of a bridge. The untrained officer shouts, “Get back over the railing! You’re going to kill yourself!” Verbal Judo - The Gentle Art of Persuasion

| Step | Meaning | Verbal Example | |------|---------|----------------| | | Listen (not waiting to talk, but truly hearing) | “Say more about that. I want to understand.” | | E | Empathize (acknowledge their emotion, not necessarily agree) | “I hear that you’re frustrated. That makes sense.” | | A | Ask (open-ended questions to guide thinking) | “What would you like to see happen here?” | | P | Paraphrase (prove you heard them) | “So if I’m hearing you right, you feel ignored. Correct?” | | S | Summarize (find common ground to move forward) | “Okay. We both agree you need an answer. Here’s what I can do.” | He didn’t argue

Thus, was born—a philosophy and a set of tactical communication skills designed to redirect the energy of a confrontation, not meet it with force. Unlike physical judo, which uses an opponent’s momentum against them, Verbal Judo uses words to redirect anger, misunderstanding, and resistance toward a mutually acceptable resolution. The jumper felt heard—not as a problem, but as a person

How to Turn Conflict into Conversation Using Tactical Empathy Introduction: The Martial Art of the Mouth In the 1980s, Dr. George J. Thompson, a former English professor turned police officer, noticed a disturbing pattern. Highly trained officers, armed with batons, pepper spray, and firearms, were escalating street conflicts instead of defusing them. Their physical tools were for survival. But their primary tool—language—was often a liability.

The Verbal Judo officer says nothing at first. He listens. Then: “Sir, I can’t imagine what brought you to this point. I’m not here to grab you. I’m here to understand. What’s the one thing that pushed you over the edge?”

Manipulation says, “I will trick you into doing what I want.” Persuasion says, “I will understand your needs and show you how my proposal meets them.”