Have you ever felt your anger building during those small, everyday moments?
Speaker APerhaps it's a rude driver cutting you off, a co worker missing a deadline, or your child refusing to listen.
Speaker AYou don't want to lose your cool, but in the heat of the moment, it feels almost impossible to hold it back.
Speaker ALater, as your regret sinks in, you why can't I just handle these situations better?
Speaker AThe truth is, we all face moments when anger feels like the only response.
Speaker ABut here's the Anger doesn't solve anything.
Speaker AIt keeps you stuck harming the people you care about and eating away at your confidence.
Speaker AIf that's been your experience, I want you to know this.
Speaker AThere's another way Today's episode dives into a powerful alternative to anger, namely compassion.
Speaker AWe'll discuss how showing compassion is not a soft or passive option, but a deliberate, courageous choice.
Speaker AWe will also show you how choosing compassion over anger isn't about letting things slide.
Speaker AIt's about reclaiming your power, breaking the anger cycle, and responding with strength instead of reaction.
Speaker AHello and welcome to episode 42 of the Anger Management Podcast.
Speaker AI'm your host, Alistair Dues, and over the last 30 years, I've taught over 15,000 men and women to control their anger, master their emotions, and create calmer, happier, and more loving relationships.
Speaker AIn this podcast, I combine my 30 years of anger management experience with the power of artificial intelligence to share with you some of the most powerful tips and tools I know to help people control their anger, master their emotions, and live calmer, happier, and more peaceful lives.
Speaker AToday, I have asked my AI assistants, Jake and Sarah, to discuss the power of compassion to help you control your anger no matter what situation you are in.
Speaker AMake sure you stick around to the end of the episode, too, where I'll summarize Jake and Sarah's conversation and let you know how to take the next step to control your anger once and for all.
Speaker AWith that said, let's get started into today's deep dive.
Speaker BHave you ever found yourself in that, well, that really familiar moment you're driving, maybe feeling okay, and then bam, someone just cuts you off and your blood pressure just shoots up, right?
Speaker BThat hot flash of anger.
Speaker BAnd the first thought is usually, how dare they?
Speaker COr something less polite, maybe.
Speaker BExactly.
Speaker BOr, you know, maybe it's closer to home.
Speaker BA comment from a loved one seems small, but it just hits a nerve and suddenly, boom, you're in this argument that just spirals.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CBefore you even know how it started.
Speaker BIt feels almost like an instinct, doesn't it?
Speaker BTo react to what feels like aggression or Unfairness by just, well, fighting fire with fire.
Speaker BYou know, more anger, pushing back.
Speaker CIt's that default reaction.
Speaker BBut if you stop and think about it for a second, does that really work?
Speaker BDoes it ever actually resolve anything?
Speaker BOr does it just make things hotter, messier, more regret later on?
Speaker CYou've really hit the nail on the head there, because that fight fire with fire thing, it's so common.
Speaker CWe all do it, but like you said, it's often just counterproductive.
Speaker CSo what we want to explore today in this deep dive is something different.
Speaker CAn alternative approach.
Speaker COne that's actually, well, more powerful and definitely more effective when things get heated.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker CToday we're focusing squarely on the power of compassion.
Speaker CAnd we're drawing these insights from someone with just a ton of experience in this field.
Speaker CAlistair Duz.
Speaker CHe's a leading anger management expert.
Speaker CBeen doing this for over 30 years.
Speaker BWow.
Speaker B30 years.
Speaker CHelped more than 15,000 people get a handle on their anger, their emotions, turning those really reactive habits into something more conscious, more constructive.
Speaker CSo these aren't just nice ideas, they're like proven strategies.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BActionable stuff.
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker CStuff that can really change how you deal with things, how you feel.
Speaker BSo our mission today, then, is to really unpack why compassion isn't just some, I don't know, soft or idealistic thing, but actually a really potent practical tool for managing anger in the real world.
Speaker CPrecisely.
Speaker BWe're gonna dive into how using it can seriously change your interactions.
Speaker BSo get ready for maybe some surprising facts about others.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker BBut maybe even about your own brain.
Speaker BAnd practical ways to apply this stuff that might, you know, challenge those automatic reactions we all have.
Speaker CIt's not about being passive at all.
Speaker BNo.
Speaker BIt's about being strong in a different way.
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker CIt's about real strength.
Speaker BOkay, so let's jump right in.
Speaker BThe first big thing, I think, is this huge blind spot we have.
Speaker BWe just assume things.
Speaker BOur anger often kicks off because we don't have the full story.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CWe make these snap judgments.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BOr it's that thing.
Speaker BPsychologists call it the fundamental attribution error, where we blame someone's character for bad behavior instead of thinking maybe something else is going on.
Speaker CThat's it.
Speaker CWe see the action, we assume the motive, and.
Speaker CAnd usually we assume the worst.
Speaker BTo make this really hit home, I want to share the story from Alistair's work.
Speaker BIt's about a guy named James.
Speaker BNow, James, he apparently had a history of, let's say, pretty explosive anger issues.
Speaker BIt affected his marriage, his job, everything.
Speaker BSo one night, James is driving home late he's actually feeling calm, relaxed.
Speaker BRoads are quiet.
Speaker BAnd then out of nowhere, this car just dangerously overtakes him.
Speaker BSpeeding, weaving, you know the type.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CInstant red flag kind of driving.
Speaker BTotally.
Speaker BAnd for James, it was like a switch flipped.
Speaker BInstant furious anger.
Speaker BHis immediate reaction, his absolute determination was, I'm going to chase that car down, confront the driver.
Speaker BAnd he even admitted he thought about getting physical.
Speaker CWow, that's intense.
Speaker CThat quickly.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BThat's how fast and how strong his anger could flare up.
Speaker COkay.
Speaker CAnd this is where it gets really interesting.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CThis is where the core idea, Alistair's big insight really comes into play.
Speaker CSo James, completely caught up in this rage, he does it.
Speaker CHe chases the car, miles, honking, flashing his lights, just determined to make this driver pull over so he can unload on them.
Speaker BYou can almost picture it.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CHe's imagining this whole confrontation.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CBut when the other car finally pulls over, Jay storms out, fist clenched, ready to basically assault this person.
Speaker CBut when he gets to the window.
Speaker CYeah, it's not who we expected at all.
Speaker CIt wasn't some aggressive young guy or anything like that.
Speaker CIt was a woman and she was heavily pregnant, clearly in agony.
Speaker CHer face just twisted in pain.
Speaker COh, wow.
Speaker CShe was rushing to the hospital.
Speaker BOh, my goodness.
Speaker BJust.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BTakes your breath away.
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker CJames just stopped instantly.
Speaker CThat white hot rage just vanished.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CReplaced by shock, huge embarrassment and this wave of guilt.
Speaker BI can only imagine.
Speaker CAnd in that second, he got it.
Speaker CThe sheer scale of his anger problem and how completely dangerously wrong his judgment had been.
Speaker CHe almost attacked someone who was in desperate need.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CAnd the, the story just perfectly highlights this basic truth.
Speaker CWe forget all the time in almost any situation that makes us angry.
Speaker CWe never really know what's going on for the other person.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BWe just see our little slice of it.
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker CWe don't know their story, their struggles, what's driving them.
Speaker COur first take, it's almost always incomplete.
Speaker COur brain tries to fill in the gaps fast.
Speaker CWe.
Speaker CBut those feelings often totally wrong.
Speaker CYou just fuel the fire.
Speaker BThat's such a powerful lesson.
Speaker BReally makes you stop and think, doesn't it?
Speaker BHow often is our anger built on like sand, incomplete information, just assumptions and okay, it's one thing with a stranger on the road, maybe.
Speaker BBut how does this play out in our really close relationships?
Speaker CAh, yeah, good question.
Speaker BLike, what about when your partner or maybe a family member says something that just feels critical or judgmental?
Speaker BThat immediate reaction is usually to fire right back, isn't it?
Speaker CIt really is.
Speaker CThat tit for tat thing.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd that's usually just a fast train to a big argument, not really solving anything.
Speaker CAbsolutely.
Speaker CAnd in those close relationships, this principle is maybe even more important because we think we know them so well.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BYou think?
Speaker BI know exactly why they said that.
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker CBut when your partner snaps or says something sharp, do you.
Speaker CDo you really, truly know what's going on for them in that precise moment?
Speaker CHonestly?
Speaker CProbably not.
Speaker CMaybe they had a terrible day at work you haven't heard about yet.
Speaker CMaybe they're just utterly exhausted from dealing with the kids.
Speaker COr maybe there's some anxiety buzzing underneath about work or health or money, something they haven't even said out loud.
Speaker BYeah, all that hidden stuff.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CAnd the key shift, the really useful response here isn't getting angry back.
Speaker CIt's not judging them back.
Speaker CIt's pausing just for a beat.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CAnd trying to get curious.
Speaker COkay, what's really going on here for them?
Speaker BCuriosity.
Speaker BInstead of anger.
Speaker CYes, that curiosity.
Speaker CThat little question, it shifts you out of that immediate fight or flight anger response and into a more thoughtful part of your brain.
Speaker CYou're moving from reaction to seeking understanding.
Speaker BOkay, so it's not necessarily about magically feeling empathy right away, especially if you're, you know, feeling attacked yourself.
Speaker BIt's more about creating that tiny gap between.
Speaker BBefore you lash out.
Speaker CExactly that.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CIt's recognizing that initial spark.
Speaker COkay, I'm feeling angry.
Speaker CAnd then deliberately, consciously asking, wait, what else could be happening?
Speaker BJust that micropause.
Speaker CThat micro pause.
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker CIt's a conscious choice.
Speaker CIt lets your rational brain catch up with your emotional brain.
Speaker CYou might not control that first jolt of emotion, but you absolutely can control your response to it.
Speaker CAnd this leads us straight into why compassion is such a game changer.
Speaker BYeah, that makes sense.
Speaker BBecause like we said at the start, fighting fire with fire just doesn't work.
Speaker BIt hardly ever calms things down.
Speaker CNever.
Speaker BIt usually just triggers the same defensiveness in the other person.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BAnd you get stuck in this loop where everyone feels attacked.
Speaker CIt's a downward spiral.
Speaker CIt escalates things, leaves everyone feeling worse, often with regrets later.
Speaker CJust adds fuel to the fire.
Speaker BSo compassion is the direct alternative, then?
Speaker CIt is.
Speaker CIt's the direct and surprisingly powerful alternative.
Speaker CInstead of reacting with more anger, more hostility, the practical step is choose understanding.
Speaker CChoose compassion.
Speaker BAnd that doesn't mean being weak or just letting people walk all over you.
Speaker CNot at all.
Speaker CIt's not about condoning bad behavior.
Speaker CIt's about choosing a smarter, more effective, and frankly, more peaceful path for yourself.
Speaker CYou're choosing to break that negative cycle.
Speaker CThere's that great quote from the Dalai Lama, I think it fits perfectly here.
Speaker COur prime purpose in this life is to help others.
Speaker CAnd if you can't help them, at least don't hurt them.
Speaker BThat's powerful, isn't it?
Speaker CAnd if you apply that to just everyday stuff, everyday interactions, yeah.
Speaker CWow.
Speaker CThe world's got enough anger and pain already, right?
Speaker BRight.
Speaker CWe really don't need to add more.
Speaker CChoosing compassion stops you from contributing to it.
Speaker CIt plants a seed for something better.
Speaker BIt's like choosing not to throw another log on the fire.
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker CIt's a deliberate act of non escalation, even when you feel provoked.
Speaker BAnd if you zoom out even more, that perspective gets even stronger.
Speaker BBecause it's true, isn't it?
Speaker BEveryone around us, literally everyone, is dealing with their own stuff.
Speaker BEveryone, your family, colleagues, the person checking you out at the store, that driver.
Speaker BEveryone's got problems, burdens, struggles we know nothing about.
Speaker CWe're all just trying to get by, trying to achieve things, survive in a world that's often pretty challenging.
Speaker CDoing our best with what we've got.
Speaker BYeah, mostly just trying our best.
Speaker CAnd what's really freeing about truly getting that, like on a gut level, understanding you're not the only one fighting battles is it makes it so much easier to respond with compassion instead of anger.
Speaker BHow so?
Speaker CWell, when you recognize that shared struggle, that common humanity, it kind of takes the personal sting out of things.
Speaker CMaybe that person's rudeness isn't about you at all.
Speaker CMaybe it's coming from their own pain.
Speaker CAnd knowing that really internalizing it stops you from accidentally making someone else's hard day even harder.
Speaker CAnd crucially, it helps you manage your own reactions better.
Speaker CYou choose not to add to the pile of negativity.
Speaker BYou choose to be part of the solution.
Speaker BOr at least not part of the problem.
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker CIt's not about being naive, it's about being smart, strategic in how you navigate a world full of flawed humans, yourself included.
Speaker BOkay, this has been a really eye opening, deep dive into compassion.
Speaker BWe started with that, that blind spot, how we assume things, like with James Story, just not knowing the whole picture.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CThe incomplete story.
Speaker BThen we saw how that unknown principle is so key in our close relationships too.
Speaker BChoosing curiosity, asking what else?
Speaker BInstead of just jumping to judgment, seek to understand.
Speaker BAnd finally really seeing compassion not just as a nice idea, but as this super effective practical choice.
Speaker BIt stops us fueling more anger, connects us to everyone else's struggles.
Speaker BIt's proactive, not just reactive.
Speaker CAnd the really empowering thing, the take home message here is that controlling your anger.
Speaker CIt's a skill anyone can learn.
Speaker CIt doesn't matter how intense your anger feels right now.
Speaker BIt's learnable.
Speaker CTotally learnable.
Speaker CIt takes practice, sure, and awareness, but it's achievable.
Speaker CAnd for practical steps, real tools to put this stuff into action.
Speaker CYou should definitely check out Alistair Duh's website, angersecrets.com angersecrets.com yeah, he's got free training there on controlling anger, mastering emotions, and you can even book a free anger assessment call with them, get some personal advice.
Speaker BThat sounds really helpful.
Speaker CIt is.
Speaker CIt's about building real, lasting emotional strength.
Speaker BSo as you, our listener, go about your day, maybe think about this.
Speaker BIf choosing compassion means really trying to see the hidden struggles in others, what might happen next time you feel that frustration rising?
Speaker BYeah, whether it's in traffic or with a difficult colleague, or even at home, what if you met it with genuine curiosity first, instead of that default anger?
Speaker BWhat different story might unfold if you just paused and wondered what else might be going on here?
Speaker CIt's a powerful question to ask and remember Alistair's closing thought.
Speaker CIt's so key.
Speaker CYou can't control other people, but you can absolutely control yourself.
Speaker AOkay, thanks so much for tuning in to today's episode of the Anger Management podcast.
Speaker AI hope this deep dive with Jake and Sarah gave you some helpful insights and maybe even a fresh perspective on handling anger and building stronger connections.
Speaker ABefore we wrap up, let's quickly revisit a few of the key ideas Jake and Sarah shared today, because these takeaways could make a real difference in how you approach tough moments.
Speaker AFirst, Jake and Sarah talked about how anger often stems from incomplete stories or assumptions.
Speaker AIt's so easy to jump to conclusions that about someone's actions or motives.
Speaker ABut as Jake and Sarah highlighted, we rarely have the full picture.
Speaker ARecognizing this is the first step to changing those automatic reactions.
Speaker ANext, Jake and Sarah introduced a powerful habit, pausing and asking what else might be going on here.
Speaker AThat tiny moment of curiosity creates space to respond thoughtfully rather than react impulsively.
Speaker AIt's not always easy, but as they showed, it can completely shift how situations unfold.
Speaker ANext, Jake and Sarah also explored how compassion isn't about being a pushover.
Speaker AIt's a proactive and powerful choice.
Speaker ABy choosing compassion instead of anger, you can break the anger cycle and truly change how you interact with others, even in heated moments.
Speaker AAnd finally, Jake and Sarah shared that real emotional strength comes from understanding, not judgment.
Speaker AIt's about staying grounded and choosing connection over conflict, even when it's hard.
Speaker AThat's where real growth happens.
Speaker ANot just for your relationships, but for you too.
Speaker ANow remember, change doesn't happen just by listening to this podcast.
Speaker AIt happens when you take these ideas and start weaving them into your everyday life.
Speaker AMaybe it's pausing during your next tough interaction, or maybe it's just seeing a frustrating moment through a more compassionate lens.
Speaker AWhatever stood out to you today, take it and start practicing.
Speaker AReal progress starts in with small, intentional actions.
Speaker AOkay, I hope you found this episode helpful.
Speaker AIf you did, I'd appreciate it if you took a moment to follow this podcast on your favourite podcast app and if possible, leave a quick rating and review.
Speaker AThis helps other people find this show and start their own journey to a calmer, happier and healthier life.
Speaker ARemember too, for free support to control your anger, including access to a free training or a free 30 minute anger assessment, call with me, visit my website, angersecrets.com or if you would like to begin your anger management journey right now, visit angersecrets.comcourse to enrol in my powerful online course, the Complete Anger Management System.
Speaker AI'd be honoured to help you on your anger management journey.
Speaker AAnd finally, remember, you can't control other people, but you can control yourself.
Speaker AI'll see you in the next episode.
Speaker ATake care.
Speaker CThe Anger Management Podcast is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute the practice of counseling, psychotherapy or any other professional health service.
Speaker CNo therapeutic relationship is implied or created by this podcast.
Speaker CIf you have mental health concerns of any type, please seek out the help of a local mental health professional.