It has happened to me so many times. Someone says a downright rude, insulting or derogatory comment and my reply is witty and intelligent. The only problem is that my comeback is three hours later and delivered in my head. In real life I just blurted out something stupid or let a deathly silence fill the air.
Aside from the wisecracks, there are other times that I’ve been embarrassed and disappointed by my reactions to bad or unexpected news, or to negative feedback. I know I can’t be alone in my frustration in not being able to turn back the clock and deliver different responses: the text messages I wish I’d sent (or not sent) when a boyfriend had decided to call it a day; the quips I could have delivered to pompous women fighting for spaces in my local Sainsbury’s car park or the deeply-profound retorts that could have put an end to a silly squabble.

One incident in particular is still really memorable to me. I had been working for a few months in my first real job and an opportunity came up for a promotion. I was backed by my line manager and her manager too and had been led to believe the interview was a formality and that the job would be mine.
I’ve always suffered from self doubt and so I was dubious that this would be the case. Still, I was completely and utterly crushed when several days after the interview I was told that I hadn’t got the job. It was my first taste of professional rejection and I was unprepared for the way I felt. After the department head delivered the news, layering on the reasons why the job had been given to someone else, I blurted out “Can I go now?”
“CAN I GO NOW?!” What sort of professional, articulate and ambitious young woman asks to be let out of an office like a small child asking to get down from the table? It wasn’t a nonchalant, “Oh well, best be off, thanks for the chat,” response but more a desperate plea to leave.

For years my reaction has haunted me. Though it would have been hideously unprofessional to respond to my boss with a witty remark, I really wish I had come up with some mature and eloquent return that hadn’t been met with a smirk as I was released from the room. Thankfully it was probably the best thing that ever happened to me, as shortly after I left that department to pursue a different career path.

SATC’s Charlotte may have managed to finally get the last word in with Big, (and how dramatic to have your waters break at the same time), however most of us will never get a chance to utter those words we wish we’d said. Until now that is! Given the opportunity, and a good dose of hindsight, what would you say? It can be a response to a flippant comment or something altogether more important. It’s time to get it off your chest!