BigDeal - #114 How CEO’s Handle Difficult Conversations (Ways I Wish Someone Had Told Me)
Episode Date: January 20, 2026Most people think communication is about being right. It's not. It's about controlling the frame. After years of navigating toxic bosses, difficult business partners, and high-stakes negotiations acro...ss Wall Street and Main Street, I've cracked the code on why difficult people always seem to win — and how to beat them at their own game without becoming one of them. Today I’m breaking down the nine strategies I use to handle toxic people. You'll learn why the loudest person dominates early but loses later, how Harvard research shows people interpret facts to protect their ego (not accuracy), and why toxic people win because they play with low emotional reactivity and high certainty — even when they're wrong. You'll learn the CLEAN framework, why gaslighting collapses under specificity, and how the Invisible Gorilla study proves we all live in different realities. If you've ever felt drained by difficult people, lost arguments you should've won, or wondered why toxic behavior gets rewarded, this episode will change how you communicate forever. Stop trying to win emotionally. Start winning structurally. Thinking about buying a business but don’t know where to start? Main Street Millionaire Live gives you the playbook, mindset, and momentum to become an owner. Stop saying “someday,” and do it this year → https://contrarianthinking.biz/MSML_BDYT26 ___________ 00:00:00 Introduction 00:02:07 The Asymmetry Advantage: How Toxic People Exploit You 00:03:25 Frame Control: The Rule That Wins Every Conversation 00:06:29 The Disrespect Response Ladder: From Absorb to Redirect 00:09:16 The Gaslighting Defense Protocol: Reality Anchor Tactics 00:10:06 Main Street Millionaire Live: Your Path to Business Ownership 00:10:51 The Four Studies That Change How You See Reality 00:13:27 Negotiating Across Two Realities: The Mirror and Redirect Method 00:14:55 The Blue-Throated Mockingbird: Creating Trigger Breakers 00:20:27 The CLEAN Framework: How to Beat Toxic People Structurally 00:22:59 The Power Move: Stop Fighting Emotionally, Win Structurally ___________ MORE FROM BIGDEAL 🎥 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@podcastbigdeal 📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bigdeal.podcast 📽️ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@big.deal.pod MORE FROM CODIE SANCHEZ 🎥 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@codiesanchezct 📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/codiesanchez 📽️ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@realcodiesanchez OTHER THINGS WE DO 🌐 Our community: https://contrarianthinking.typeform.com/to/WBztXXID 📰 Free newsletter: https://contrarianthinking.biz/3XWLlZp 📚 Biz buying course: https://contrarianthinking.biz/3NhjGgN 🏠 Resibrands: https://resibrands.com/ 💰 CT Capital: https://contrarianthinking.biz/4eRyGOk 🏦 Main St Hold Co: https://contrarianthinking.biz/3YfGa8u Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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You have been communicating your entire life the wrong way.
Like the entire world is like you, a nice person, a good person, good intentions, trying to do the right thing.
Here's the truth.
The world is not like that.
There are difficult people all around you every single day, and there will be more.
The secret today that we're going to talk about is that you can take back your peace and power from toxic, obnoxious, hard people,
even people you love who are also just difficult.
But in order to do it, you need to know the rules of the game.
And most people don't even realize the game they are playing.
So today, let's get those rules and communicate to get what you want, even what other people say it's impossible.
We'll back it up by science, history, and the greatest communicators of all time.
Let's steal their homework.
Welcome back to the Big Deal podcast. I'm Cody Sanchez. Let's start it.
Most people don't lose their power because they're wrong.
They lose their power because they communicate like the other person is reasonable when they're not.
Do you ever think you're exchanging information but realize that the other person is negotiating status, blame, or control?
psychologists call this motivated reasoning. So people don't actually listen to understand you. They are hearing to protect their identity. So Harvard Business School found people interpret facts in ways that protect their ego and self-image, not accuracy. And do you ever wonder like, how do you actually beat them without becoming one of them? Well, maybe you haven't noticed this, that the most difficult person in the room often gets their way. They interrupt, they blame, they drain everyone else. And somehow they walk out the winner, meaning,
while the reasonable person, calm, ethical, they walk out exhausted, pissed, kind of confused.
Toxic people don't win because they're smarter, which is good. They win because they're playing
the game differently. What Harvard shows us is that this dominance behavior shows that people who
display low emotional reactivity and high certainty are perceived as higher status, even when they're
wrong. So toxic people are persuasive not because they're right. They're persuasive because
they're unmoved. They have low emotional reactivity, but they really act like they know what they're
talking about. So how do we win at their game? I think about this as the asymmetry advantage framework.
If they are willing to create discomfort in you and not have emotion from them, they can exploit
your asymmetry. And there's two types of asymmetry as toxic people use. One's called narrative
asymmetry. They tell simple stories. Yours are too nuanced, because nuance is usually the fact.
Cognitive fluency research shows simple narratives are believed more than accurate, complex ones.
So whether you hate Donald Trump or you love Donald Trump, what can we say for sure? He is simple.
That is why his communication style works very often, because nuance is hard to remember.
They say on average, we can only remember one to two sentences from an entire 10-minute conversation.
Yikes. So clarity beats correctness in human conflict. So that's a lot of.
One, take your stories, simplify them, don't add, maybe's, buts, also's, and, one sentence, that's it.
The second asymmetry that people use who communicate well, which is called boundary asymmetry,
they take space. You ask for permission. Clinical psychology says, boundary violators persist when
boundaries are inconsistently enforced. This is from the American Psychological Association.
What does that mean? It means you need to control the frame. Let me give you my frame control rule.
So whoever controls the conversation will control the outcome. And this comes from hostage negotiation
and power dynamics. For instance, if you are going to have a conversation with somebody, they give you a
tight one line sentence. You want to respond in an unn nuanced way. What do I want you to do? I want you to
listen to their one sentence. And then I want you to hold out your hand and just go, let me think about that for a
second. Let me ponder that. Let me analyze that for a second. Whatever word you want to use. And then instead of
feeling like you have to start talking immediately in order to regurgitate exactly what you're going to say.
No, no. Boundary control? Hmm. You say I'm the problem. The math says this is the problem.
Use a redirect and have a one-liner. I actually learned a lot of this from one of my friends, Chris Foss,
who wrote Never Split the Difference. Huge book. I go back to him again and again when I want to
control the frame. And what he learned at the FBI law enforcement was that reframing emotional accusations
reduces hostility faster than a direct rebuttal. When someone says, you never listen to me.
What do you actually want to say? You want to say, if you're me, that's not true. I listen all the
time. This never happens with me and my husband, of course. That's the wrong response, though.
The correct response is a frame reset. You're going to repeat back to them. I understand that you
feel this way. Can you be more specific with me? And tell me what you think I am not listening to.
And when you do that, I can bet my bottom dollar.
They might say, I don't feel that way.
That is what you're doing.
And your response is going to be, I don't want to debate words in an argument.
I don't believe that's useful.
What I heard you say was, you are unheard.
You're not accepting their frame.
You're not saying, I didn't listen to you.
You're repeating back to them what they said.
So, you know, when I went to head to head with another MD managing director at First Trust,
I had this exact same issue.
He was trying to box me in, make me feel small.
He was trying to tell me that what I was talking about was wrong.
And I remember the line explicitly that he said to me back in the day.
He said, well, I haven't done that because you've made me feel like I don't have the power to do it.
You've completely, this is your fault for the way you communicate.
First of all, this is like a very middle-aged man.
This was a full adult.
And so I always do giggle when somebody says,
you'll make me, you'll easily. As if I'm like, okay, guy, take it easy. But anyway, I listened to it.
And I said the exact same thing. I said, hey, I don't think I have control of your feelings.
Are you saying that I can control your emotions, your emotional state, what you feel inside.
That's not up to you. That's up to me. What do you think happens? Well, no. Of course, you know, no, what I'm saying is.
Okay. So I said, so instead, what do we want to try to resolve? And so I want you to try this.
Tell me how it works for you. Do not accept somebody else's frame. And by the way, we're not being
combative because oftentimes this is with people we love. This is not always in business. It could be in love.
This is just a way to make sure that you become a person who has boundaries. How do you respond to
disrespect? You know, back of the day, I always wanted to be like one of those characters on
Entourage, like already, if you guys ever watched that show where he just, he fired the heat. Like,
somebody came at him and he just had a response. And I'm not like that. I'm actually a wuss. And so I
developed something I called the disrespect response ladder. And I was like, okay, I need to figure out a
path to use, and I'll show you that. But when somebody disrespects you, you kind of have four
options. And most people jump to the worst one. So level one would be absorb. This is really weak.
So you just say nothing. Resentment builds. Respect drops. This is normal for people like me who are a bit
of an avoidant. Like, I just don't want to deal with it. I don't have time for this, you know.
So if that's you, too, I hear you, I'm the same. Level two is react. This is explosive.
Yell, defend, explain. You look unstable and absorb their frame.
Level three, explain. This is more naive. I do this too. So over justify, you over talk,
you signal insecurity. You know, when I first tried to get a job, I was notorious for doing this.
You know, hi, my name's Cody Sanchez, and these are all my accolades. And, you know, here's exactly why you should hire me and da-da-da-da. And I've learned over time,
little pause, exactly what you need, not a single word more. Now, the God tier level response is level four,
which is name plus redirect. Hmm. That comment feels disreservation.
respectful. If you want to talk, I'm open. If you want to attack, I'm done for the moment. This literally
just happened to me the other day, you guys. I was dealing with a leader at one of our companies,
and I gave him some hard news that somebody else was going to take a role higher than him. He did not
like this news. Proceeded to start cussing. This is fucking bullshit. I'm worth 10 of this guy.
Bullshit fucking blah, blah, blah. And I had to say, this is a call with executives. Executives at my
companies, they don't cuss emotionally. So if you need to take a minute and stand outside until you
can emotionally re-regulate, that's perfectly fine and come back in. But we don't do angry cussing
at the executive level. That basically says, this is my line. And it's hard to argue with an
unemotional, clear line. This goes back to that idea of assertive communication with calm boundary
setting that is perceived as dominance, which is kind of crazy, isn't it? A fancy way to say.
the key is calm is actually better than loud, short is better than long, still is better than emotion.
And my friend Jefferson Fisher, who I had on the podcast, that's a great episode, by the way.
You should listen to it after this, has a great line about this. He says, you don't have to attend every argument you're invited to.
Ah, so good. And then he also says, silence can never be misquoted. But if, say, they keep gaslighting you and you don't know how to defend against it, I got a little protocol for you guys.
Think about a disaster. Gaslighting defense protocol. Gaslighting is reality erosion. It's things like that never happened, but you know it did. You remembered it wrong, but you know that that's how it happens. What it actually does is this increases cortisol and anxiety by destabilizing perception of reality. This is from the American Sociological Review. And this is actually used in torture, which is crazy. But let's set a couple things straight. Even though you don't see reality,
the same way, there are a couple studies that are fascinating that I think can help you even explain
to the other person who's making you feel a certain way that maybe it's not gaslighting,
maybe it's just human nature. Because we do have a different perception reality in almost all events.
So self-belief is really about knowing yourself, your abilities and knowing your path.
And it's part of that path that many of us get stuck on, which is actually why I created something
called Main Street Millionaire Live. And it's for anyone whose path includes business ownership,
whether you've already bought a business or you want to buy a business, we help you find and buy the best business for you. Because business ownership, I believe, will change almost everyone's life. I know that if you come to this event, it will change yours. It will help you believe the truth, which is that you are capable of ownership and can win at the game of owning things in life, which is the only game that leads to financial freedom, asset ownership, and overcoming what I think holds a lot of people back. And so if you don't
think you're good enough to become an owner to get to the next level. I want to talk to you about
four studies that totally changed my mindset on that. The first one's called the Invisible Gorilla.
So in the famous Shabree and Simon experiment participants watched a video of people. And they were
like pass in basketballs. Have you guys seen this? And people were told to count passes for one team.
So you're watching it. You're counting all the passes. You're kind of focused on that.
Well, in the middle, a person in a literal fucking gorilla suit walked through, stopped, thumped their chest,
walked off. What's crazy, and I swear this happened to me, half the viewers, Cody, never saw
the gorilla at all, even though it was literally in plain sight, but I had told my brain that I was only
watching this thing and I was going to get those numbers right, totally missed the gorilla. Study two,
I see it clearly you're biased. Social psychologist Lee Ross called it naive realism, which is the
belief that I see the world objectively, and people who disagree with me must be uninformed,
irrational or biased. And there was a perfect way to think about this. Like two siblings read the same
news article about a political protest. One sees dangerous extremists. The other sees brave citizens.
Each is certain. They're just describing what happened. When they argue, they both feel like the
other is literally black. In reality, they have all of these preset beliefs and identities that
color what details they notice, how much weight they give them and what story they assemble.
So they literally live in two different realities from the same article.
This is also like selective attention.
So your brain cannot process everything.
So it spotlights what matches your current task, fears, goals, or things you've told it are important.
That creates unintentional blindness.
And there's lots of mental models about this.
So expectations, culture, past experiences.
They act like lenses.
And they decide which data counts, what gets ignored.
and that allows you, your brain, to create a personalized version of reality. And so the moment you think, I'm just being logical, you actually stopped listening. The moment that you think you can't buy a business, you actually have just been pre-programmed to think you can't. So how does this show up in your fights and communication? A couple examples. You might say, you ignored me at dinner. And their reality was, I was trying to handle the check and the kids and I thought I was helping. You say, you never appreciate what I do. Their reality,
they do appreciate you, but their appreciation cues are invisible to you or not in what, you know,
they famously call your love language. So the takeaway, same night, same facts, totally different
edits, because attention and stories are pointed at two different things. So you have to learn how to
negotiate across these realities. You can say, okay, listen, last night, it looks like we kind of
watched two different movies. We saw two different realities. Would you mind if we each described our
version without interrupting. This signals one, there are two realities, and both get airtime.
And don't ask or assume, swap the why did you do that? That's an attack for what were you trying
to do there? Curiosity. You're asking for the intention behind their movie. You're not cross-examining
it. And then you can mirror their key frames. So repeat back their big beats. So in your version,
you were stressed about money, trying to solve it fast, and my feedback felt like attack. People
relax when they fear their movie is at least understood, even if you didn't see it. Now,
what's great here is unrelaxed people do not come to the table. And so you are going to be this
calm on the balcony in the storm. So you're going to stop arguing about whose reality is right.
Say, both can be true. In your reality, you were helping. In mine, I felt alone. How do we design the
next scene? So we both feel on the same team.
This is key if you want to be a CEO in business.
You need to negotiate forward, not backward.
Instead of replaying the old scene for the 12th time,
you can say next time this happens, what do you need from me?
Here's what I need from you.
This just happened to me.
I had a member of the team.
And my team, and he's a super high performer, great team member.
I gave very direct feedback to something that we had done
because I sometimes have the emotional EQ of a Tasmanian devil.
And so I just don't really think about it. I go, here's the feedback. I know you worked on this thing for three years, but here's all the things I hate about it. I only focus on the stuff I don't like. So I sent him very direct feedback. Bam, bam, bam, da, da, da, da, da, da. I didn't mention anything I liked. I didn't mention how great he is. I just gave all the hard feedback. This sent him into a spiral. I've done. So once I realized he was on this spiral, what do I do? I call him into the office. I send him down. And I say, hey, I just want you to know. I just want you to know. I just want you to know.
know how valued you are here, how intelligent I think that you are. And I want to tell you something
about the way that I communicate. With people that I trust, people I think are super capable,
intelligent, and I would consider one of my leaders, I don't have a filter. I talk just like Cody
with no sort of rose-colored glasses or hand-holding happening. That can be too much for people. It can be
pretty abrasive. And so I want to tell you that I thought your project was great, but I always default mode
think your work is great, and because I think you're so good, I'm only going to give you the edits.
How can I communicate better with you? And the guy was like, actually, no, I do want you to just give it to me,
tough. And I said, okay, well, if that's the case, then next time, if you do feel that little ping inside
where you're like, God, she doesn't appreciate or whatever, do you want to just say a word to me?
And I like using a word that's ridiculous, so I'll be like, blue-throated mockingbird.
Just say blue throat and mockingbird.
And I will know that that means I kind of pissed you off.
And you don't feel like I saw you.
And I can be like, oh, whoops.
Hey, man, here's what I actually think.
Can I give you some context?
And I find that when there's a high degree of trust,
you can have a trigger breaker that basically breaks up the standard communication
and it changes people's state.
So try this and see if it works for you.
Because sometimes they are difficult or toxic people.
not people you love, but sometimes they're people that you love too. And so I want you to remember
that it's okay to say we remember this differently. Here's what I'm confident about. Here's what I'm not
debating. And then stop talking. Because one of the other things that's true is silence is devastating
to gaslighters or emotion. It can kill either one of them. So one of the most powerful things that
you can do in communicating is to never be emotional in a world of people who have never emotionally
matured. Projection theory shows people attribute their own traits and insecurities to others.
right? This is from a famous study by this guy by the name of Newman, I believe, back in like the 90s.
90% of insults are just self disclosures. So when someone says you're selfish, what it often means is I feel deprived.
So you have to mentally reframe them. What would need to be true about them for the behavior to make sense?
This allows you to create that balcony emotional distance and that distance creates power.
I mean, Jefferson Fisher also says something amazing that I really love, which is the first thing about standing up for yourself is knowing
when to do it because not everyone is worth getting out of your chair for. Also, he's like Texans,
so I love these little one-liners. He's like, not everyone is worth getting out of your chair for,
you know? Like, you're right, shucks. So this ability to not take things personally shows yourself
respect. And I'm going to tell you the truth that it makes people who are trying to manipulate you
super uncomfortable. I remember I was getting pushed out of a company and this guy wanted to intimidate me.
And thankfully, I do believe like a pound of pre-production is worth five of post, so I found out about it ahead of time. And he might have sidelined me. But I found out about it. So I did a silly thing, which is I brought my Navy SEAL very scary husband who has a constant resting bitch face, a lot of muscles and an ability to, you know, kill people with me to this meeting. And Matt was not expecting that. So we sat down at a hotel and I could see he just like starts twitching, getting nervous, whatever. And I could tell that he was just going to leave it. He's like, I'm going to wait until Cody's by herself. And I can try to.
intimidate her. But what did I do? I brought it up instead. I said, Matt, I know what you're trying to do.
You're trying to push me out of the company. You want to take all of these assets that I've raised.
You want to push me out. And I know this because of X, Y, Z. And he's like, oh, well, no, that, I said,
listen, this isn't, this isn't a debate. I already know. And so the next question is, what are we going
to do about this? Because I am not going to do what you want me to do here. And this is, this is, this is
something for you to know. Like, you have to decide how you get defined. And it's not just about holding
yourself or others accountable. It's about the way that you allow them to write your story. So I don't
want you to fall into what I call the accountability trap, which is when someone says,
you never do what you're going to do. I instead want you to use that specificity switch we talked
about. And I want you to make sure you stay away from things like never, always. And instead, I want you to say,
tell me one example you want to address, right? So why this works is because the more we can get
somebody like Matt to go, oh, no, I'm not doing that. I go, no, no, you are. I heard about this conversation.
Now, what are we going to do about it? Well, that allows these false accusations to collapse under
precision. Valid ones become solvable. Okay, you want to push me out? What's the contract? What are we
going to do? And the research says that specific feedback leads to resolution. Vague blame escalates
conflict. So keep it simple and specific. There's sort of like three rules of power communication
if you're going to try to negotiate something like I did with Matt. So if you have somewhere where
you know somebody is bullying you at work, your boss wants to push you out, you have an employee
that's toxic that you have to fire, you have what is called a crucial conversation. You're going to
slow down because slow speakers are perceived as more confident, remember? There are studies that show
that slower cadence increases your authority perception. So you're going to say less. You're going to
end with direction. You're going to say, here's what happens next. You're not going to leave the
conversation open-ended because you actually beat them by having a very clean exit. So we're going to cut
the frame. You're never going to argue their accusation. If they say, you always try to redirect me,
Cody, you're going to say, that's not a useful direction. What outcome are you asking for? You just
removed their emotional hook. Then you're going to L limit exposure. Toxic people don't want to
change with feedback. They change with reduced access. So you're going to say, hey, we're not going to
communicate that way. Hey, you're not going to speak to me like that. Then you're going to E enforce
consequences. Boundaries without consequences are just suggestions. That's not we're going for. So you're
going to say, if this continues, I'm ending this conversation. Then you might actually have to
end it, by the way. Back yourself up. You might have to end it because consistent consequence
enforcement is going to reduce repeat violations. So if I let that employee keep cussing at me,
well, he probably would keep cussing at me the next time. Then you're going to use an A for anchor
reality. When they distort facts, don't debate. Say and said, here's what I'm willing to discuss.
Here's what I'm not. We're going to reality anchor, specificity anchor. And then N, no closure needed.
this is critical. You do not need them to understand, then to agree, them to apologize. Seeking emotional
closure from antagonistic people that increases your stress, lots of studies like on this. The power move is to say,
here is how we are going to execute the end of this conversation. And you can walk away,
not liking the guy, not liking the girl, being mad, that doesn't actually matter. So if a business
partner and employee, someone creates conflict with you, remember,
loudest person's going to dominate early, but you're going to not. You're going to stop explaining. You're going to reduce access. You're going to enforce terms. And suddenly, they're going to lose their leverage. And I remember, like, the moment I stopped trying to win emotionally, I won structurally. Think, like, let that, like, sink in for a second. Stop trying to make them feel what you want them to feel. Do you care about their feelings? No. You care about the outcome you want to get. And then also remember, like, toxic people don't win because they're evil.
They win because everyone else is so busy trying to be liked. But leadership isn't about being liked. It's about being clear. So you don't beat toxic people by out arguing them. You beat them by outlasting, outstructuring, and out limiting them. And the most dangerous moment is when you realize you never needed to fight them at all. So the question you have to ask yourself is, do you want to argue with small people? Do you want to allow yourself to become small because they are? Do you want to be an asterisk and a paragraph and a
book nobody reads because other people got to redirect you your whole life. Do you want to just not be
taken seriously by a serious person? Do you want to be remembered? And if you do, you got to communicate
these ways. Because unless you figure out how to communicate, you'll never achieve anything really
big in your life. It is the key to the things that you want. So maybe you'll be like me and you'll
come back to this video. You'll watch it again. You'll follow and subscribe. And I promise I will
teach you the lessons that I wish someone had taught me. But most people were too afraid to tell the
truth. I promise I won't do that to you. Okay, guys, we'll see you next week.
We are sitting on a generational wealth creation event. If you're here, this means you're a builder.
As we're going through these next three days, I want you to know that the American dream starts with
you guys by our little Main Street Revolution. And then I just want to give you guys permission
to take a leap of faith.
If I knew then what I know now, I would probably do bigger deals.
It's given us an extra layer of security that we never would have had.
I am so excited to introduce you to some ordinary people doing extraordinary things.
We have to really take the time to make a meaningful connection.
It's the fact that there is a lack of connection and the person just wants to be seen, heard, and understood.
Thanks for taking the question.
Are there extra things that need to be done when trying to...
you hang off bad debt.
Great question.
I buy business is so simple.
Even your grandmother understands them.
That's the game.
It's you and me versus the problem.
We're going to try to solve this together.
I know how to build trust in a very advanced way.
How does buying a business fit into the vision for your life?
Today my goal is to teach you some fundamental skills
that you can use to accelerate your business.
If you make a promise in the mirror,
know that your word is freaking iron to you.
These people on Wall Street, they want to keep the normal people out of the game.
Main Street millionaires are all around this world, and it starts with each and every one of you.
What are you waiting for?
Your path to ownership starts now.
Get your ticket to join us on Main Street.
Join us today.
