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March 12, 2026 | Jim Macy, Ph.D., MS

Rapport: Why Doesn’t It Happen Instantly?

Rapport Is a State of Safety

Rapport is not merely a communication skill. It is

a psychological state in which two people feel safe enough to be open with each other.

When rapport is present:

  • Conversation flows easily
  • Attention  sharpens
  • Both  individuals feel comfortable and engaged
  • Defenses  relax
  • Ideas  and emotions can be exchanged freely

It feels effortless. In fact, many people describe strong rapport as if time slows down and the interaction becomes almost effortless.

But this state does not appear automatically. The brain is constantly scanning the environment for signs of threat or safety,

and until safety is established, the mind maintains protective barriers. These protective systems exist for a very good

reason: survival.


The Mind’s Protective Filter

When you meet someone new, your brain performs a

rapid assessment. Long before conscious thought begins, the subconscious mind

is asking questions such as:

  • Is this person safe?
  • Can I trust them?
  • Will interacting with them benefit me or harm me?
  • Is it socially safe to open up?

If the brain senses risk—physical, emotional, or social—it activates protective mechanisms. These mechanisms raise what hypnotists and psychologists often call the critical filter or critical factor.

When this protective filter is active:

  • People become guarded
  • Communication becomes cautious
  • Genuine connection becomes difficult

Rapport cannot fully develop until these protective systems relax.


Two Forms of Safety That Control Rapport

Two primary forms of safety determine whether rapport emerges quickly or slowly.

1. Physical Safety

At the most basic level, the nervous system is designed to protect the body. If someone appears threatening—through posture, tone, aggression, or unpredictability—the brain shifts into a protective mode.

When physical safety feels uncertain:

  • The nervous system becomes alert
  • Stress hormones increase
  • People maintain emotional distance
  • Trust becomes difficult

No amount of conversational technique can overcome this instinctive response. The human brain always prioritizes survival before connection.

2. Social and Emotional Safety

Humans are profoundly social creatures. Throughout our evolutionary history, social rejection could mean isolation from the group—and historically, isolation could mean death. Because of this, the brain also protects us from:

  • Humiliation
  • Judgment
  • Embarrassment
  • Emotional
  • vulnerability

If a person feels they might be ridiculed, criticized, or diminished, they instinctively protect themselves by withdrawing emotionally.

In these moments, rapport disappears—not because the other person lacks communication skills, but because the mind is protecting itself.

Watch for the next post on rapport entitled The Misunderstood Technique of Mirroring and

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