Difficult patients What is ‘gray rocking?’ Should we embrace it or not? Joan Naidorf, DO, breaks down the TikTok trend of “gray rocking” and shares her thoughts on whether it’s a viable strategy for physicians. April 7, 2026TuesdayApril 2026 issue What's Trending Joan Naidorf, DO Dr. Naidorf is an emergency physician, speaker and author from Alexandria, Virginia. Connect with her on LinkedIn. Contact Dr. Naidorf
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This well written article is an absolute must, for medical students, interns, residents, physicians in practice, and their patients. If I were a reviewer, I would give it 5 thumbs up. Apr. 11, 2026, at 2:08 pm Reply
Dr. Joan Naidorf, You absolutely nailed it! You described in detail the “Art of Medicine ” how the importance of patient interaction is professionally handled with care, compassion and empathy to treat patients with the dignity that all humans deserve! Simply put truly caring for patients is seeing to their needs as you would wish for you or a loved one to be evaluated and treated. Love one another as we have been Loved ❤️ Gray Rocking has its place in medicine for deescalation but otherwise not. Thanks for the confirmation and encouragement in the practice of medicine. DrB Apr. 21, 2026, at 3:07 pm Reply
Gray rocking is a form of abuse when there is a relationship (professional or personal) between two people. At best it is neglect. The person “gray rocking” the other person is engaging in subversive emotional abuse as they often do not inform the recipient of the gray rocking behavior of what is happening. It engenders fear, confusion, and lacks the communication that is essential in healthy relationships with other humans. Boundary setting, exploring root causes, and even ending the relationship are better approaches to managing chaotic or aggressive behaviors. I don’t know a psychiatrist or therapist worth their salt that would recommend the gray rock approach to clients. Apr. 21, 2026, at 9:39 pm Reply
It can be quite appropriate, depending on who you’re dealing with. In the caregiver role, you’re not allowed to ‘respond in kind,’ fight back, etc. Trying to win people over with empathy, understanding, sweetness, etc., is fine if it works, but ‘if’ isn’t ‘always.’ Sometimes refusing to be pulled into and reinforce an obnoxious dynamic is the way to go. The old saying ‘never argue with a fool; people might be able to tell the difference’ comes to mind. If the blatantly obnoxious person is the only one in the room projecting any kind of emotional intensity, some might start to feel a bit awkward and rein it in. It may be education (i.e.: ‘you catch more flies with honey than vinegar’). In any case, you can avoid providing positive reinforcement to attention seeking. May. 2, 2026, at 10:43 pm Reply