THE ED MYLETT SHOW - What Anger Is Really Hiding (And Why It’s So Dangerous)
Episode Date: May 8, 2025What if the worst thing ever said to you wasn’t just a memory—but a scar that shaped who you are? In this episode, I’m opening up about a tough truth that most of us are either living with—...or have dished out ourselves: anger and emotional volatility. Whether you're on the receiving end of it or you're the one dishing it out, today’s message is a wake-up call. I’m not just sharing concepts—I’m pulling straight from my own story, from childhood scars to leadership missteps, and how I finally learned that the strongest people don’t intimidate—they protect. You deserve relationships, workplaces, and a life where you feel safe to be your full self. We’re not tiptoeing around the issue. We’re calling it out. If someone in your life makes you feel small, anxious, or afraid to speak freely—you’ve got to draw the line. Because you’re not just allowing it…you’re teaching them it’s okay. And that’s not love. That’s not leadership. That’s not life. I’m also giving you the tools—real, practical habits—that have helped me move from a reactive man to a regulated one. And if you're the one struggling with anger, here's your moment. I’m not judging you—I've been you. I know what it means to erupt, to regret, to hurt the people you love most. But you can flip the switch. You can become the kind of person your family, your team, and your future self can count on. No more band-aids over bullet wounds. It’s time to make real change. Key Takeaways: How to recognize emotional abuse disguised as “passion” or “leadership” The difference between a strong man and a scared one hiding behind anger Why the contrast of “high highs” in toxic relationships can deceive you Concrete steps to regulate anger before it destroys your identity and others How your emotional patterns directly impact your kids and future generations The one trait every safe, authentic, high-performing relationship has You were born to do something great. And that starts with living a life where you're safe to be you. It's not just about love—it's about respect, belief, and emotional safety. Let’s stop normalizing anger, and start creating environments that heal. Max out. 👉 SUBSCRIBE TO ED'S YOUTUBE CHANNEL NOW 👈 → → → CONNECT WITH ED MYLETT ON SOCIAL MEDIA: ← ← ← ➡️ INSTAGRAM ➡️FACEBOOK ➡️ LINKEDIN ➡️ X ➡️ WEBSITE Get my exclusive Monday Motivation training in GrowthDay, the world’s #1 app for advanced mindset and personal development. Visit https://growthday.com/ed. This show is sponsored by GrowthDay. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This is The Ed Myron Show.
Alright, welcome back to the show everybody.
So, let me ask you a question to start out the week.
What's the worst thing that's ever been said to you? Like the worst, the thing that hurt you the most.
You remember it, don't you? Give yourself a second and think about that. I mean the most hurtful thing ever said to you. And I ask you that question because you know last week we talked
about emotional regulation and emotional maturity and so many we got
Flooded with messages from people saying how do you deal with your own anger or how do you deal with anger issues?
From somebody in your life like an angry person
And so although I'm not an expert on anything
I do have some insights after 54 years on earth and being both a recipient of anger and also the distributor and
years on earth and being both a recipient of anger and also the distributor. And I remember the worst thing ever said to me and it was when I was very young.
It was about 45 years ago.
But 45 years later, I can remember that moment like it was yesterday.
And something tells me you can remember that moment as well.
Ask yourself another question.
Think of the worst thing you've ever said to somebody the other way
And just so you know, you're the lead character in their life as having said the most mean thing to them
one of the real frustrating things about
anger is
You can never unsay something
You can never take it back
Once you've said it it's there forever and it's impossible to undo it.
And the hurt that it gives somebody alters your relationship with them forever, somehow
to some extent.
You can do 9,000 things after that event, but you can never take those words back and
you can never undo it.
And so if you've got somebody that really treats you with anger in your life or maybe
you're the angry person
I'd like you to pay really close attention today because I don't think in the moments
When we say something angry to somebody or out of anger, we realize the permanent damage that we're doing to somebody
My guess is most of you that are listening are already leaning in because you're dealing with somebody in your life
Who behaves in an angry fashion with you. And if you do,
you need to listen very closely today. Because here's what happens, if you have an angry person
or someone who operates out of anger towards you, it alters more things than you realize in your
life, even very subtly and unconsciously. Not only does it hurt, but here's what angry people do,
and it's why having them in your life requires either
a change of their behavior or a change permanently with them out of your life and I mean that very
seriously. If you're being treated in an angry way by an angry person, you deserve better than that.
Also, if you're a leader who runs your business in an angry way and I know what that's like as well,
to operate out of anger and intimidation.
Many, many leaders think they're great leaders, but really what they are is they're angry
intimidators. I led that way for a while and it's fatiguing and debilitating and it's not true
leadership. Being a father or a mother who operates out of intimidation and anger is not
an authentic tremendous father or mother.
And those of you that are on the receiving end of angry things in your life from angry
people, listen closely.
Or if you're the distributor, listen closely.
Maybe some of you are both.
And again, I only usually create content out of personal experiences and to tell you that
I only know about this because I've made these mistakes.
If I was an angry and intimidating type leader for a while, and I know what it's like to operate out of anger and why we do it.
The other thing I'll tell you is that I've also been the recipient. I think the longer you receive
anger, the more you realize the absolute destruction that it causes in your relationship
and in people's lives or as a leader in your business, certainly in families.
And you know what angry people do? Not only do they hurt you, but here's what they do that's subtle.
Angry people make you modulate your own behavior unconsciously because you're trying not to trigger
them all the time or set them off. If you have anybody in your life, a husband, a wife, a
boyfriend, a girlfriend, a true friend, a boss, and in any way you find yourself modulating,
changing your phraseology,
your words, your behavior, your tactics to simply not trigger them,
then you're really not being your authentic self or true self because their
response causes you to morph into something small, less than you really are,
different than you really are. And even if it's small changes you make,
even if it's subtle, the truth of the matter is you're not really having an authentic relationship with this person.
I want you to think this through as I say it to you. Do you have anybody in your life that
you're constantly modulating, better not say this, I better not do that because that's going to set
them off, that's going to trigger them. That's not a real relationship, that's not love, that's not a
leader. And if you're that person that's constantly being triggered, you know, some of you that have
this person in your life, maybe send this to them today because they may's constantly being triggered, you know, some of you that have this person in your life
Maybe send this to him today because they may love you and just you created this pattern and this dynamic in your relationship
Where it's become accepted
Where it's become okay to them and we'll talk about that in a minute as well. It's not okay
Now by the way, there may be a topic that's off-limits, you know politics triggers them. Okay you can set that aside. But if it's something beyond the normal two or three triggers in life, that's not normal.
And it's not okay. And you shouldn't have to, with people in your life that are in your proximity,
walk on eggshells around them because you're worried you're going to set them off or trigger
them. And we're going to talk about some of these conditions with people because what these people really have or you have if you're this person,
and by the way, I've been this person because I was raised by this person.
And some of you are just operating out of things you caught that weren't even
taught to you when you were a child.
And some of you are co-dependence in the fact that you grew up in a relationship
with a father or mother who treated your mom or your dad that way or you that way.
And now it's acceptable for you to receive this treatment from somebody around
you. Let me be very clear. It's not acceptable.
You should not be the recipient of anger. You can deal with certain things in your life.
Okay. Certain behaviors that don't feel good.
But if you are the target and the recipient of anger from somebody,
passive aggressive anger or direct shots verbally or physically, that's not acceptable. And remember this, you teach people
how to treat you, right? And if you're allowing this to take place, even the first time, and
there's not a boundary, if there's not a consequence that we're going to talk about in a second,
you teach them it's okay to treat you this way way and it isn't. I want to be clear,
some of you young folks too, that a very dear friend whose daughter is, she's 17 years old,
she's in a relationship with a young man and this young man operates out of anger with her,
verbally, often. He's passive aggressive, he puts her down. It's subtle, but he does it.
And I saw it one day and I pulled him aside. I said, am I going to let her know that she shouldn't
be receiving this or are you going to tell her? He goes, what are you talking about?
I said, did you see how he just dismissed her right there in front of everybody? You're
teaching her this is okay. She will carry this the rest of her life if you allow her
to take, there's going to be a consequence for that guy right now. And I just want you to know, I think we've become very immune, almost accepting of anger.
Our culture, we're very dismissive, very angry towards one other.
Just look at social media, these keyboard warriors with their little angry outbursts
from their, it's just unbelievable.
The amount of anger that's just dispensed, that's spewed as if it's okay.
It's not okay.
And so, these folks that operate out of anger, they have poor emotional regulation. Poor
emotional regulation leads to verbal or physical outbursts. It's not acceptable. Angry outbursts,
sudden unexpected outbursts. There's something called intermittent explosive disorder, IED.
Can you imagine that terminology? And here's what it
really means. I'm going to give you the definition. Poor emotional regulation, that's what it means.
Angry outbursts, sudden unexpected episodes. Several conditions look like this, but a big one
is intermittent explosive disorder. Do any of you have somebody in your life like that? They can go
from zero to a hundred like that. You're like, wow, two minutes ago, everything was fine and they just lose it.
Okay, this person has intermittent explosive disorder. It's not okay. It's not normal.
It's not funny and you shouldn't accept it. Okay, there's also something called oppositional
defiant disorder. This is a pattern of angry or irritable mood, argumentative or defiant behavior or vindictiveness.
Usually it affects children or adolescents.
So that's just somebody who's got a pattern of being angry or irritable. You go, no, it's normal teenage behavior. No, it's not.
It's not, it's not okay. And you need to correct it as a parent as soon as you can.
Or you're going to send somebody into the world who's going to have a very hard time most of their life in and out of relationships, in and out of jobs,
in spite of their talent, in spite of their gifts. And perhaps that child's a recipient from somebody
with oppositional defiant disorder as well, but it's usually somebody who's
thinking they're being rebellious against authority. That's not rebellion.
That's a pattern of angry and irritable moods.
And if that pattern is not interrupted,
if there are not consequences,
and you're gonna find that to be a very common theme today,
you're sending somebody out into the world
who's likely to fail, likely to have an unhappy life.
Before I even move any further forward,
I just want to say something to you
if you're on the receiving end of a passive aggressive person
or an aggressive person, you deserve better than that. Do not spend your life as the subject of that type of behavior, as a target,
as a receptacle, as a trash can for them to dump into their anger and aggression. You deserve so
much better than that. Please don't accept it. Please don't stay if it continues. Please.
It's better to be alone.
Many of you are staying with somebody
because you're more afraid to be alone.
Because there's some high highs with these people too, huh?
Almost like the contrast between how terrible they treat you
and then how good it is in the good moments.
And that contrast exaggerates the good.
The good's not really that good.
It's just way different than the bad.
And because they take you all the way over to the bad,
and then they drop in a couple goodies once in a while,
little breadcrumbs of kindness, breadcrumbs of a gift,
breadcrumbs of an apology, breadcrumbs of a high moment,
that contrast makes the good seem better than it is.
But if you're in a normal functioning relationship,
that's not such a good good. It's just way different than the bad. There's another disorder called conduct disorder.
It's a more severe form of ODD that I just described. It's characterized really by aggression
towards others, and these people also violate rules and norms. They're deceitful. They'll lie
to you and then make you feel guilty for calling them on it.
They will not only be rude or mean to you,
but they'll do it in public.
They'll do it in front of your friends and family.
They'll take a passive aggressive
or an aggressive shot at you in front of other people.
Or they'll be in front of a room full of people as a leader
and take shots at people in the room aggressively.
That's not acceptable. The people you lead should not be afraid of you. That's not great leadership. You can look no further than to Jesus for this example.
Now remember, Jesus rebuked the apostles, any of you that are Christians that read scripture, he rebuked the apostles.
So there's nothing wrong with correcting people, constructive criticism, a firm course correction. That's not the same thing as anger. When you operate out of
anger, you are out of control. It's different to pause, to think, to take a day or two and say,
we need a meeting about this. That's different than flying off the handle out of anger.
There's another disorder, I'm just giving you a few of them so you know, disruptive mood deregulation disorder, DMDD. What this looks like is persistent
irritability or anger with frequent temper outbursts that are disproportionate to the
situation. In other words, the response is far worse than the situation that took place. Someone
cuts you off on the freeway, they just lose their mind.
Someone jumps in front of them in line, they go crazy.
You say something that they misunderstood as a joke
and they took it personally and they just go to level 100.
That's a problem.
Then there's stuff like borderline personality disorder.
That's intense unstable emotions.
The point of the matter is,
I only tell you what these things are
because these are real conditions.
Now, here's the situation, here's the deal.
This is also why the internet has become so out of control.
Let me explain to you something.
If you don't create consequences for the people that treat you with anger, they will continue
to do it, the pattern will continue and it will over time creep up and get worse and
worse and worse.
And all of a sudden you're in a relationship where you can't even be yourself because you're afraid to set them off.
That's why the internet is so out of control.
Keyboard warriors can say angry, hurtful, mean things with no consequence.
What is anger? If you flip the coin over, it's fear.
They're scared. And these people, believe it or not, even though they seem very strong and bold and intimidating,
these are weak people.
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When I operated out of anger in my life when I was younger, I was a weaker man.
I was a scared little man who used anger as a weapon, as a leader, as a friend in my relationships. These are
weak, little, scared people. That person in your life is weak, they're little, and
they're scared. Trust me, a strong man is kind. He can defend and protect, but he's gentle. He doesn't harm the people around
him. And if he does, even once, he has true remorse and he apologizes. It's true of a
real woman as well. If you have a man in your life who's doing this to you, he's not a real
man. If you're listening to this and you're a man and you treat people this way, you're a scared little man, grow up, stop it, emotionally
regulate. If you're a keyboard warrior on the internet, you're identifying who you are
when you put people down, when you think it's funny. I get emotional because I see so many people down and hurt, losing
their confidence, losing their self-esteem. And it's because of the people closest to
them. It's because of the people closest to them. The people they love and want the most
belief and affection from are the ones taking it from them and flipping it and hurting them.
And day by day, slowly but surely they lose their self-respect because they tolerate it. They lose their self-esteem because of the recipient of this.
See, we all have enough negative thoughts about ourselves that we don't need
somebody to confirm them. We have very few positive thoughts about ourselves.
We do need people to confirm those.
If you're somebody who treats people this way,
strangers or people close to you,
take a really good look at yourself.
And if someone's doing it to you,
you better provide them some consequence.
It's the reason it's out of control in our public space.
We can yell and I mean,
it's okay to disagree with someone politically, but to hate somebody because they believe something
different than you? To be angry with a stranger? Worse, to be angry with someone that you claim to
love? Think this through. Is that who you want to be at the end of your life? What if at the end of your life you get to see the real of all the people's souls and
spirits you hurt with your words or behavior or just being dismissive of them?
In fact, what if you just played that role to yourself right now?
There's probably as many as you're playing, if you're this person, there's so many more
you can't even remember because you did it when you were angry and it's a pattern. And here's the truth, if you operate this way, you can change.
You're better than that. It's okay right now if I'm talking and you feel a little bit of a gut
punch, a little bit of a wake-up call, a little bit of shame. It's okay. I know because especially
when I was in business, I was an intense, I still am, intense, intimidator.
And it worked.
I had the voice for it, the build for it, energy level for it.
It worked for a while until it didn't, until I actually had my own children.
And I went, if someone ever talked to Max or Bella the way I sometimes talk to people
in business, they wouldn't need to worry about what they're having for breakfast tomorrow
morning.
I can promise you that.
And so here's what happens.
You got to give them consequence.
In environments where there's no consequence, like the public space, like the internet,
you watch, it's out of control.
If you don't give them consequences in your relationship, and I'm talking about even a
boss, even your boss, hey, I don't mind you giving me a course correction, but I will not tolerate your anger.
You're out of control.
And I know that sounds easy to say, you have to stand up for yourself and you have to give
people consequences.
Remember this, in your relationship, they remember what you said, you can never unsay
something, you can never take it back. It'll never be the same. And here's what you said. You can never unsay something. You can never take it back
It'll never be the same
Here's what we do when someone's angry towards us, at least in my case I went I'll match your anger and I'm gonna raise you one and then it ratchets it up doesn't it?
That was always my MO. You're angry towards me. Haha. I know how to play this game better than you
I will match you and raise you one. Here we go
And then it's off to the races a lot of people have these dynamics in the relationship where one is usually the instigator
and instead of you just receiving it, you got this play. I'm going to raise you one. And then you
really have a dynamic where you go, hey, I'm going to win this one. And a lot of people go, yeah,
but the making up is so great. Really? That's a mature loving relationship.
You make up from hurting one another.
That's like saying the best thing in life is to get into a physical fight
and then put band-aids on each other's wounds.
That's insane.
Now, usually we can see direct anger.
The other type of anger that we're recipients of or distributors of is the passive aggressive.
As a leader
I used to love to get up and go, you know
there's some people in here who blah blah blah blah blah and I wouldn't say a name and so I thought it was okay
to be hurtful to a group
passive aggressively. People do this in your relationships too. People love to passively aggressively take shots at one another because it's like
that's not what I meant. Oh, I'm so sorry. You read what I was
saying wrong. No, you didn't. No, you didn't. Here's how it can affect a family. My dad,
by the way, when he got sober, I just want to make sure that I give my dad credit,
was the most kind, gentle, generous, beautiful man. And he helped thousands of people get sober.
And I mean it. He would give you literally the shirt off his back. I don't think we ever
drove by an unhoused person, homeless person ever where my dad didn't stop and do something for them.
No time in my dad's life after he got sober would he not take the time to help a stranger
or a friend to the point where I'll never be as good a man as him. That was my dad sober.
My dad drinking, that was another story altogether. I remember when I was a kid, our fancy night out as a family, two or three times a year, a birthday or an anniversary or something, was we would go to the Sizzler.
That was our fancy night out. I don't know if you know the Sizzler, but you literally wait in line to order your food even there. It's like kind of a fast food steak place.
But that was our fancy dinner.
I remember we used to like the Malibu chicken.
We would go to the Sizzler regularly and my dad would inevitably have an emotional angry
outburst.
Either someone at our table and our family or a server or the food wasn't right or it
took too long and there was never a consequence, right?
Because he was a big strong guy and it was just kind of what happened.
I remember after a while of us going there, I was thinking when we would go
there after a while, right when we would get there,
they put us in this private room and this is like where they would normally do
like VIP dinners. And I remember thinking, gosh, man, I was really young.
Our family, we're big time. Not only we were at the Sizzler,
but we're in the VIP room, the private room for just our family.
I remember thinking, gosh, my dad's a big shot. And then as I got older and I watched my dad
yell at a server one night in that room, all of a sudden it dawned on me, oh, we're not in this
room because we're VIPs, we're in this room because they're hiding us from the rest of the restaurant.
He's become so notorious in this place that when he comes in,
he's on some list where they go move them in the other room because it's going to get ugly.
And then I realized our family was ostracized. And then as I got a little bit older, when I knew
we were having one of these big nights out, I would get sick. Sometimes I was really getting
sick with anxiety about going, but a lot of times as a little boy, I would get sick. Sometimes I was really getting sick with anxiety about going, but a lot of times as a little
boy I would fake being sick and stay home as our family went out to their fancy dinner
because I didn't want to be embarrassed.
And I wonder if seeing that as a little boy, I started to model it a little bit as I became
a man.
And I'm not explaining my behavior nor am I explaining
the behavior receiving. I guess I'm explaining it but I'm not excusing it. And I think my
understanding of where I got that from caused me to change it. And so, if you are an angry
person, take a second and think about where did you model this from? You got it somewhere.
I remember seeing my dad in a lot of different fights and as I became a young man, anybody disrespected me. They were going to have to pay the consequences. And I just want to say to you
that if you exhibit angry behavior, your kids are catching it. And at some point, they will release
that pattern out into the world themselves. If they are seeing you treat your spouse this way, they are either going to treat their
spouse that way or they are going to attract a partner who treats them this way.
Your kids will model it one way or the other.
They will either receive it or believe it's normalized because we move towards what we're
most familiar with in our life.
So if you have an angry partner and you're tolerating this behavior,
your kids are seeing it whether you know it or not, and they're going to model it.
More than likely, if you're a woman and a man's treating you this way,
your daughter, if you continue to accept this, the consequences aren't even terrible for you.
Your daughter will attract a man into her life who treats her the exactly the same way.
Vice versa, if the mother is the one acting out that
way and it's the man receiving it, your son will attract a woman who weakens him, minimizes him,
demoralizes him, and shrinks him. Or just as bad, they will be the distributor of anger.
There are consequences with your children if you have children.
They will be the distributor of anger. There are consequences with your children if you have children
You had to ask yourself if you're dating somebody right now who treats you this way
If it doesn't change, is that the person that you want to have children with?
Sometimes you have to have more than love
You have to have respect
You have to have belief a little bit more than just love
If you have an angry partner, there better be consequences.
So what's a couple of things you could do?
Number one, when somebody operates angrily towards you,
here's some of the tips they give out in the world.
Okay, I'll give you what they are
and I'll give you my thoughts.
Psychologists always recommend deescalate
and neutralize the emotionality of it.
Okay, yeah, don't continue to get after them.
Number two, they say be assertive.
You could be assertive yourself and show some backbone.
Three, communicate constructively.
Understand and validate what it is that's really concerning them.
Or they say, go see a therapist.
Fourth, they say practice patience and compassion for this angry person.
This is the typical therapy psychological response that's taught. Five, pick
your battles and think long term. Like I said, they also say practice patience and compassion.
Number six, reflect on your actions and understand the triggers that you're giving this person.
And saying all of that, it ain't your fault they're doing this. And so should you reflect
on your actions and understand the trigger? Sure,
but you shouldn't have to walk on eggshells worrying about triggering somebody you love.
There should be a basis of understanding that I love you, we're on the same team,
I'm not intentionally doing this. Maybe there's one area in a relationship that you just stay
away from. It's the X, right? Or some financial mistake they made. I got that. You shouldn't be
poking on somebody. But if you got two, three, four things, you're going, I can't do this. I can't say that. I better
not do that. Better not look like this. I don't know about those all emotionals. Pick your battles.
Don't trigger them. No, at some point, give them consequences. All that stuff's fair.
Now, if you're the angry person, here's some stuff that has helped me. Number one, think before you
speak.
In the heat of the moment, it's easy to say something you're later going to regret.
Take a few moments, walk away, breathe.
Almost every angry situation of my life, if I took a little while, and sometimes you do
ruminate on something, but by and large, most of the time, when the emotions subside, perspective
increases. So it doesn't mean I won't confront
this person but I will confront them in an articulate, prepared, emotionally mature way
that's constructive as opposed to operating out of the moment. Bam! Anger. You're almost always
less articulate angry. You're almost always meaner. You're almost always trying to raise them
and you often will say something that
you can never take back. So take a few moments when you get angry to collect your thoughts before
saying anything, before sending the email, before pushing send on the text. Take a day. Most things
in your life do not need to be replied to instantly. Here's a rule. Never make big decisions
under emotion. never speak significantly
quickly under emotion, never email or text under significant emotion, and don't post
on the internet under great emotion. Take some time. If it's that good of a response,
it'll still be there tomorrow or eight hours from now. That has changed me because I have
found as I've become more of an emotionally regulated person, the window of time
before I've collected myself has shrunk. In the beginning, it still took a long time. I'd run
really, really hot, I'd ruminate. But over time, as I've aged, I would say over a 25-year process,
the perspective changes. And a level 10 thing is more like a level two or three that I need to
address. You begin to slow down and see their perspective, their intent. Sometimes you just conclude this is really a bad person.
And so, do I need to win this conversation or do I just need to exit it and exit them?
Sometimes it's someone you barely know that's triggered and angered you. They are living
rent-free in your head if you respond with anger
You have reduced your emotional maturity below theirs
Isn't that crazy someone acts in a super emotionally immature way towards you you get so angry you go below them
Now they own you
Think that through think before you speak
number two once you're calm, express your concerns. As soon as you're thinking clearly, express your frustration in an assertive but non-confrontational
way.
Non-passive aggressive also.
Like, just be straight up.
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Something really bothered me yesterday.
It's been weighing on me.
I was going to come right back at you.
And you know what I thought?
Let's breathe on this.
Let's get some perspective.
So I've had some time to do that.
And I want you to know this isn't acceptable to me.
And I don't want to be back and forth here and confrontational with you.
But let me just state my feelings about this, please. I'd like you to listen to me and then I'll really sit back and listen to your response.
So state your concerns and your needs clearly and very directly without hurting them back or trying
to control them. Okay? Seriously, it's a big deal. Number three thing that's helped me,
countdown. I have literally put a countdown clock in different things that are kind of immediate,
you know, where I'm in a public place and someone's done something. I'll literally count down. I'm not
kidding you. 10, 9, 8, and I'm breathing too, all the way down to one. And I find that by the time
I've counted down, oftentimes my emotions have gone down with
that count, at least to some extent.
The other thing that happens when you start practicing these positive responses, you feel
better about yourself.
You feel less scared and angry.
You feel more mature.
You begin to see them for the small thing they're doing or the small person they become
in that moment, and you feel bigger than it.
It feels really good in life, you know, in the short term to win the conversation and
raise them more angry, but just for a little bit.
And then you don't feel so good about yourself after you feel like you need to take a shower,
don't you?
Or a bath and you're like, this is not who I am.
But when you count down and rise above it, but then you do constructively, assertively
respond, you feel bigger.
And you've made it a deposit not only in your emotional maturity, but in your identity,
in your self-confidence.
I am in such control of myself and my emotions that even under the highest level of duress,
I behave in a way that's conducive and congruent with who I truly am as a person.
Your self-confidence actually goes up.
Number four, go get some exercise. If you're really feeling angry, stop, go get some exercise. Take a walk, do some jumping jacks, workout. Physical activity can help reduce that stress level
and it can cause you to become much less angry. If you feel your anger escalating,
go for a brisk walk or a run, spend some time doing some other enjoyable physical activity, stretching something.
You'll just be different.
It doesn't mean the thing's still not bothering you.
And by the way, what I'm not saying is just let it go.
You should not let it go, okay, when you're angry,
but you should be able to regulate yourself.
Number five, take a timeout.
Literally, timeouts aren't just for kids.
Go give yourself a timeout. You're like, Ed, are you serious? I'm like, yep. Literally, time outs aren't just for kids. Go give yourself
a time out. You're like, Ed, are you serious? I'm like, yep, I'm using one of these all the time.
Give yourself some short breaks during times of the day. Sometimes we just feel ourselves getting
worked up about something, don't you? And you're ruminating on it and it's not something someone
else did or it's just ruminating. It just gets bigger and bigger. We keep replaying the thought.
We do thought stacking. We ruminate. Get away from it. Take a time out. A few moments of quiet time might help you feel better prepared
to handle what's ahead of you. Number six, take a breather. And literally, when you're stressed or
angry, your breathing becomes shallower and it speeds up as you grow angry. So reverse the trend
and your anger by taking slow, deep breaths from
your nose and exhaling from your mouth for several moments. I'll do that for 30 seconds, a minute, two minutes.
Number one change for me is controlling my breathing.
Fear and anger are the same breathing patterns.
Strength, confidence, bliss and peace also are the same breathing patterns.
Laughter and ecstasy, all the same breathing patterns. So regulate your breathing. Number seven, stick with I statements.
Okay, what I mean by that is criticizing or placing blame might only increase tension.
Instead, use I statements to describe the problem. Instead of you,
okay, use I statements. Be respectful and specific. For example, say, I'm upset that you left the table
without offering to help with the dishes.
Instead of saying you never do the dishes, you never do the housework, you, you,
stop with the you statements and start with I statements. I'm upset you left the table without offering to help with the dishes.
I know that's something very basic or I'm upset with what you said.
I'm upset with what you did not not you. Because now you're in this
thing. You know exactly what I'm talking about. Try to use I statements. Number eight, if
it helps you, repeat a mantra. Find a word or a phrase that helps you calm down and refocus.
Repeat that word again and again. It's like, relax, take it easy. You'll be okay. It's okay. It's okay. By the way, mine is chill dude, chillax, chill dude, chillax,
just chillax, chillax, chill dude, chillax.
And I'll repeat that mantra and it reduces the tension.
Number nine, humor.
Lightning up can help diffuse tension.
Use humor to help you face what's making you angry
and possibly giving you unrealistic expectations you have for how things should go. Don't use sarcasm. It hurts feelings,
it's passive aggressive and it makes things worse. Okay? Number 10, play some tunes,
get some music going. It'll calm you down. I like to listen to worship music when I'm stressed,
angry, instantly gives me perspective, instantly takes me elsewhere.
Okay, number 11 picture a stop sign, literally a verbal, physical stop sign, like you see on the
side of the street. That universal symbol to stop can help you calm down when you're angry. It's a
quick way to help you kind of visualize the need to halt yourself and your actions and maybe walk
away from a moment. A few more things. Number 12,
write it in your journal. I give you that one because it's worked for many people like Coach.
For me, when I'm angry, I can't even write, right? But for some people, it's taking pen to paper and
releasing it through themselves onto a piece of paper instead of releasing that venom onto another person. Number 13 is just move. Physically just move. Move your body, move out of a space,
move out of an environment, go work out as I said, but also just get out of the
space. Move. If you're indoors, get outside.
Right? Move. And then lastly, 14, if you've got these anger issues repeatedly,
know when to seek some help. Learning to control your anger can be a challenge for some people at times and seeking help
for anger issues is a loving gesture.
It means you're trying to love yourself and the people around you.
If your anger seems out of control, causes you to do things you regret, really ever,
or hurts those around you, try my techniques here or go get some help.
That's what I recommend now I want to finish by just talking to you my friend if you are receiving
anger from somebody
You need to give them consequences now
You deserve better. There is a life out there
Or someone who loves you will show you they love you
There's a life out there with friends,
with colleagues and in your intimate relationship
where you're not having to constantly
seek an apology from somebody.
See, the best apology is a behavior not repeated.
That's real apology.
And if you're in a relationship
where they're hurting you
verbally or physically, you give them consequences. And if it's a repeated
behavior, that consequence is you're leaving. It's the hardest thing in life
to do, but there are too many wonderful people in the world for you to stay in
an environment where you suffer, where you shrink, where you modulate your
behavior, where you walk on eggshells.
You know, the bottom line, the people around you should make you feel better about yourself.
They should make you feel safe.
See, great leaders in business, if you go look at a lot of my leadership, I'll say the
number one job of a leader is to create safety.
The people feel safe in your environment.
There's a big vision,
there's a direction they're going, they feel appreciated, but they feel safe.
They feel safe. People can only be the fullest expression of themselves when they feel safe to
do so. If someone doesn't feel safe around you, it's like when you first meet a stranger, you don't
know them yet until they feel safe to be themselves with you. That lady when I first met, I didn't know
you were this funny, I didn't know you could dance. Man, you're crazy. You don't know any of this
until someone feels safe with you. People will never be the fullest and best and truest expression
of themselves until they feel safe with you. That's true in business and that is true in life
and family, personal and intimate relationships. If this person doesn't make you feel safe,
you'll never become you in that environment. You'll never have the love or in business,
the performance, the expression, the achievement that you deserve if you don't feel safe with that
person. And so, ask yourself that question, do I always feel safe with this person? Not
some of the time, not most of the time, all of the time. See, in relationships, we're
going to get frustrated with one another. There's going to be some anger, there's going
to be some angst, but it should never get to the point where we don't feel safe, where
we're going to take incoming fire verbally from somebody, certainly never physically, but even verbally, where
it's incoming fire.
Because as I said in the beginning, some things you can't undo, some things can never be unsaid.
Be very careful what you say in anger.
Matters so much.
You alter the relationship permanently.
Remember that thing I asked you in the beginning? What's the worst thing someone's ever said to you
that hurt you the most?
You'll never forget it.
You'll never forget it.
If that list is more than one with the same person,
you need to evaluate that.
If you're the distributor of that anger
and you've done it more than once to somebody
You need to go back and watch this again, I just want to remind you you were born to do something great with your life
You deserve to be happy and successful and loved and protected and all you do both the men and the women here men
I'm speaking to you
Absolutely as much as I am.
If you're in a relationship with a woman
where you don't feel safe, you can't be yourself,
she criticizes, she's passive aggressive,
she verbally or physically hurts you,
she puts you down in front of other people or privately,
you deserve better, brother.
Ladies, I think you know most of the time today
who I've been talking to and it's you,
my precious sister. You deserve to be loved and protected and to feel safe and to become the
highest expression of yourself in that environment with the people around you.
All right, everybody. I hope today helped you. God bless you. Treat each other kindly.