What Gets Your Goat?
What is
it for you?
- What drives you to the breaking point--leaving you feeling crazy, angry and frustrated?
- What tips you over the top leaving you feeling mad at the whole world without knowing why?
- What turns you from being a fully functioning adult into a seemingly helpless and frustrated child inside?
E-motion--Don't Leave Home without it
I hate to feel stuck or controlled--it makes me angry and
frustrated. I am driven by the desire to move freely in my daily life, so
seeking a way to quickly break free from encumbrances became important to me at
a young age. Years ago I embraced a definition of emotion that allows me to
view all emotion in a positive light and to use it in a more fluid, productive
manner.
Instead of viewing emotion as good or bad, happy or sad--I've come to understand E-motion as energy in motion. Our e-motions give us the energy to act, the drive to 'right wrongs', and the desire to pursue our dreams.
Personal Values Define Our Internal 'Lines in the Sand'
The goal of anger management isn't to become a placid,
'Stepford Wife' devoid of emotion--especially anger. It's to learn how to use
the energy created by e-motion to create positive outcomes.
Chances are the situations or people making you exceptionally angry violate one or more of your personal values. Our personal values define our invisible boundaries--our lines in the sand. When someone crosses one of those lines we feel violated, resulting in a wall of anger and frustration. And anger left unattended can quickly turn inward and lead to depression.
I get angry or frustrated at least once a day. But I've
learned to use my anger--or energy-in-motion-- to help me identify what
personal values have been violated. Being able to name the invisible boundaries
crossed puts me back in control and provides the momentum for taking positive
action.
By using my anger to help me identify what I value, I now
have choices for taking action based on what I value rather than on what makes
me angry.
Use Your Anger to Identify what You Value
Don't just sit in your anger, use the energy to identify what your personal values are and take positive action based on them.
Situational depression occurs when you feel hopeless or
helpless in response to a situation that knocks the wind out of you. To avoid
getting depressed in response to tough situations, get in the habit of always
following up by taking action that has the potential of producing positive
outcomes.
What to Do
Think of a situation or person that upset you in the last
week.
- What happened?
- List what made you angry or frustrated in the situation.
- List things you value that may have been violated in the situation.
- When you're ready: Chose a positive response based on your personal values.
- Take positive action--even if you don't feel like it.
Here are some of the things I've learned about myself by
going through this process of converting anger into better understanding my
personal values and choosing to take action based on those values.
What makes me Angry?
- Injustice
- Bullies
- Narcissists
- Untested Assumptions
- Overly Critical Judgments
- Controlling People
- Uncaring People
- Self-righteous People
- Lack of Opportunity for People
- Being Held Back
What Do I Value?
- Opportunity to Achieve
- Creativity
- 'Flow' Experiences
- Humane Treatment of People
- Humane Treatment of Animals
- Productive Work
- Harmony
- Freedom
- Caring
- Teamwork
- Enthusiasm
- Joyful Experiences
- Fun
- Achieving Personal Dreams
- Helping Others Achieve their Dreams
- Openness
- Truth
- Trust and Connection
How I want to act based on Anger
- Lash out at offender.
- Give them a dose of their own medicine.
- Cut offender off.
- Talk poorly about offender.
- Turn others against offender.
- Wish bad things on the offender.
How I choose to act based on my Values to Create a
Better Outcome
- Do nothing. Let my anger cool.
- When I'm ready, Look for ways to open up communication and develop trust.
- When I'm ready: Talk to, not about the person, to clarify facts and understanding.
- Seek to create opportunities to work with others joyfully and enthusiastically.
- Seek more positive environments.
- Reach out to others to build trust and connection.
Don't let yourself be led by your anger. Choosing your actions based on your values puts you in the driver seat. Put your e-motions to work for you--giving you the energy to act, the drive to 'right wrongs', and the desire to pursue your dreams. You're worth it.
For more than 30 years, Susan Meyerott has been helping people lighten up and step over invisible barriers to change one step at a time. She speaks to your heart, puts you at ease, and makes changing easier than ever before.