Have you ever won an argument only to walk away feeling strangely empty?
Speaker AMaybe you proved your point.
Speaker AMaybe even you were right.
Speaker AAnd yet the evening was ruined.
Speaker AThe tension lingered, and the connection with your partner that you actually want quietly slipped further away.
Speaker AIf you can relate to this, you're not alone.
Speaker AMany people find themselves in similar situations where the desire to win an argument ends up damaging their relationships.
Speaker AThis is because there is one simple habit that quietly destroys relationships.
Speaker AAnd unless you are able to change, runs the risk of eroding the peace, trust, and even love in your relationship.
Speaker AHello, and welcome to episode 65 of.
Speaker AOf the Anger Management Podcast.
Speaker AI'm your host, Alistair Duse, and over the last 30 years, I've taught more than 15,000 men and women how to control their anger, master their emotions, and create calmer, happier and more loving relationships.
Speaker AIn this podcast, I combine my three decades of anger management experience with the power of artificial intelligence to share some of the most effective tools I know to help people control their anger, master their emotions, and live calmer, more peaceful lives.
Speaker AToday, I've asked my AI assistants, Jake and Sarah, to take a deep dive into this one simple habit that has the power to destroy any relationship unless you are able to change it.
Speaker ANow, make sure you stick around to the end of the episode, too, where I'll summarise their conversation and show you how to start controlling your anger once and for all.
Speaker AWith that said, let's get started with today's deep dive.
Speaker BHave you ever finished an argument and one about something totally trivial?
Speaker COh, yeah, like the correct way to load the dishwasher.
Speaker BExactly.
Speaker BOr who is supposed to take out the recycling.
Speaker BAnd you argue, you make your case, and you.
Speaker BYou win.
Speaker BYou were factually right, but then you walk away with this just hollow feeling, right?
Speaker CYou proved your point, but you kind of ruined the entire evening.
Speaker BYou lost the peace, right?
Speaker BAnd if that cycle sounds familiar, that relentless, exhausting need to be right, then you are definitely in the right place.
Speaker CAnd that need to be right, I mean, it's one of the biggest hidden costs in our lives.
Speaker CIt's not just some annoying habit.
Speaker CIt's a core driver that fuels anger, it escalates stress, and it can really, really damage our relationships.
Speaker BI.
Speaker BOur mission in this deep dive is pretty straightforward.
Speaker BWe're looking at the work of an expert who has helped thousands of people get a handle on their emotions.
Speaker BAnd it all boils down to one single, powerful act.
Speaker BLetting go of the need to be right.
Speaker CIt sounds so simple, but it is revolutionary.
Speaker CSo the core question we're asking you to think about with us.
Speaker CIs.
Speaker CIs being right actually worth the emotional chaos it causes?
Speaker BLets start with a really high stakes example.
Speaker BThis one shows just how dangerous it can be to justify our anger with that shield of I was right.
Speaker COkay, so this is the story of a truck driver, a professional truck driver who is really struggling with intense road rage.
Speaker BAnd his reasoning from his point of view made perfect sense.
Speaker BI mean, he's in this massive vehicle.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BHuge rig and smaller cars are constantly cutting him off, forcing him to just slide slam on the brakes to avoid.
Speaker CA collision, which is obviously incredibly dangerous from anyone's perspective.
Speaker CHe felt his anger was justified because, you know, these other drivers were being reckless.
Speaker BExactly.
Speaker BThat sense of injustice.
Speaker BThey are wrong.
Speaker BI am right.
Speaker BIt gave him permission to retaliate so he'd start shouting, laying on the horn, tailgating them.
Speaker CHe was trying to teach them a lesson to prove to them how wrong they were.
Speaker BAnd this is such a common cycle, isn't it?
Speaker BWe point to what someone else did wrong to justify our own angry reaction.
Speaker CIt is.
Speaker CBut here's where the story takes a turn.
Speaker CThe truck driver asked the expert if he ever got angry.
Speaker CAnd the specialist said rarely, if ever.
Speaker BAnd the reason he gave wasn't some complicated breathing technique.
Speaker BIt was a philosophy.
Speaker BHe just said, it has never been important for me to be right about things.
Speaker CAnd that one sentence is really the key.
Speaker CIt's the first step.
Speaker CBut it makes you ask, why?
Speaker CHow is that even possible?
Speaker CHe explained that when he was a kid, he was very bright.
Speaker CYou know, one of those kids who always knew the answer, the one with.
Speaker BTheir hand, always up in class, always.
Speaker CBut he quickly learned that constantly proving he was correct came with a price.
Speaker CHe was picked on, you know, called a nerd, a geek.
Speaker BSo the very act of proving something he already knew to be true, it actually brought on negative consequences for him.
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker CHe realized that simply knowing he was right was enough.
Speaker CHe didn't need the external validation.
Speaker CHe didn't need the other person to surrender and say, you win.
Speaker BThat's a huge shift.
Speaker BDecoupling your own conviction from the need for someone else to agree with you.
Speaker CIt's crucial.
Speaker CThe moment you do that, you take the fuel out of the fire.
Speaker CYour ego is satisfied internally.
Speaker CSo it stops demanding that the rest of the world bend to your point of view.
Speaker BOkay, that makes total sense in say, a debate or a classroom.
Speaker BBut what about in our closest relationships?
Speaker BIf I just stop asserting what I believe is right, don't I risk becoming a doormat?
Speaker BWhere's the line.
Speaker CThat's the critical question.
Speaker CThis isn't about being passive.
Speaker CIt's about understanding the dynamic.
Speaker CWhen you focus on proving you're right, you're actually doing two things at once.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker CYou're also simultaneously trying to make your partner, or whoever you care about unequivocally wrong.
Speaker BAnd nobody likes to be made to feel wrong.
Speaker BThat feeling is the relationship killer.
Speaker CIt is.
Speaker CIt's a zero sum game.
Speaker CThink about it.
Speaker CHow awful does it feel when someone you love makes you feel small or stupid?
Speaker BTerrible.
Speaker BIt's the worst.
Speaker CWhen we prioritize being right, we are actively inflicting that feeling on the people we supposedly care about most.
Speaker BAnd you see this constantly with couples in conflict.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BThey come in to talk, and within minutes they're arguing over tiny details every time.
Speaker CAnd the reason is simple.
Speaker CBoth of them walked in wanting to prove they were right.
Speaker CAnd that desire just.
Speaker CIt completely shuts down their ability to listen to each other.
Speaker BThey stop trying to understand and start what?
Speaker BGathering evidence for their case?
Speaker CPrecisely.
Speaker CIt becomes all about ego defense.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CAnd you cannot connect with your partner if you're busy defending your ego.
Speaker CIt's impossible.
Speaker BSo that's the moment.
Speaker BThe moment you feel the conversation shift from the topic to defending your ego, that's the alarm bell.
Speaker CThat's the moment you need a plan.
Speaker BOkay, so if we're supposed to stop trying to be right, what do we do instead?
Speaker BWhat's the actionable step?
Speaker BWhen you feel that anger rising, the.
Speaker CPlan has to be pre decided and immediate.
Speaker CThe second you notice that urge, that need to prove your point, you must stop arguing.
Speaker BJust stop talking.
Speaker CStop arguing your point, you need to hit a mental pause button.
Speaker CThe problem isn't what you believe.
Speaker CIt's your focus on making them admit it.
Speaker BC. Pause.
Speaker BAnd then what?
Speaker BInstead of pushing your point, you.
Speaker CYou pivot.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CYou switch your entire focus to trying to understand their perspective.
Speaker BThat's hard to do in the heat of the moment.
Speaker CIt is, but it's possible if you operate from a core belief that there are always valid aspects to how another person thinks or feels, even if it's completely different from your view.
Speaker BSo I don't have to agree with their conclusion, but I do have to accept that there's a valid reason they arrived at it.
Speaker BIt forces empathy.
Speaker CIt does.
Speaker CInstead of arguing for your side, you start asking questions to understand their side.
Speaker CSomething like, okay, so if I'm hearing you right, you feel this way because of X.
Speaker BYou're changing the game from who is right to why do we both feel this way.
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker CIt stops being a confrontation and starts being a collaborative effort to understand this doesn't just lower the anger, it actually improves the communication, it transforms it.
Speaker CAnd in almost every situation, understanding why they're saying something is way more beneficial than just hammering on why you think you're correct.
Speaker BSo let's bring this back to the truck driver.
Speaker BHe implements this idea.
Speaker BHe decides to prioritize calm over being correct.
Speaker BWhat actually happened.
Speaker CThe results were immediate and dramatic.
Speaker CThe next week he came back and said that when a car cut him off, he just stopped trying to prove they were wrong.
Speaker BSo no more horn, no more tailgating, none of it.
Speaker CInstead, he just backed off.
Speaker CHe created more space between his truck and the car.
Speaker BHe traded his ego for safety, his.
Speaker CSafety and everyone else's.
Speaker CAnd here's the amazing part.
Speaker CHe didn't just feel safer, he told the expert, he felt calmer, more relaxed.
Speaker CThat constant simmering anger he carried all day, it just started to dissolve.
Speaker CAnd he had this huge realization.
Speaker CHe saw that his need to be right about the rules of the road was putting him one tiny mistake away from, from a catastrophic, maybe even fatal accident.
Speaker BThe satisfaction of winning the argument was literally risking his life.
Speaker CIt's the ultimate cost benefit analysis, isn't it?
Speaker CThat fleeting little ego boost you get from winning.
Speaker CIs it worth the constant frustration, the broken relationships, and maybe even serious danger?
Speaker BWhen you put it like that, the answer is obviously no.
Speaker CAnd the long term benefit of letting go is so much greater.
Speaker CYou build happier, calmer, and more respectful relationships.
Speaker CYou become someone people actually want to be around because they know they don't have to constantly be on on guard.
Speaker BSo the takeaway for anyone listening is if you find yourself in that loop, always trying to be right, just stop for a second and ask yourself why?
Speaker CIs it really about the facts?
Speaker COr is it about needing that external validation?
Speaker CChoose understanding instead.
Speaker BWe know change is hard, but learning to control anger really is a skill.
Speaker BIt's something anyone can master.
Speaker CIt absolutely is.
Speaker CDoesn't matter how long this has been a pattern for you, you can break the cycle.
Speaker BSo if this is hitting home for you and you're ready to start applying these skills, we really encourage you to check out the expert's main resource.
Speaker CYou can visit angersecrets.com that's where this whole philosophy is laid out in detail.
Speaker CYou can schedule a free 30 minute anger consultation call or download a free training guide on how to break the anger cycle for good.
Speaker BIt's a real commitment to yourself to making sure that the need to be right doesn't destroy another part of your life or hurt the people you love.
Speaker CAnd maybe a final thought to leave you with.
Speaker CYou can't control other people, but you can always control yourself.
Speaker BThat's the ultimate choice we face every day.
Speaker BThanks for joining us for this deep dive.
Speaker BBe sure to follow the show and we'll see you next time.
Speaker AThanks so much for tuning in to today's episode of the Anger Management podcast.
Speaker AI hope you found this deep dive into the one habit that quietly destroys relationships, happiness helpful and thought provoking before we wrap up, let's take a moment to go over a few of the most important ideas Jake and Sarah shared.
Speaker ABecause although these are simple shifts, they can make a huge difference in your everyday life.
Speaker AFirst, Jake and Sarah talked about the hidden cost of always needing to be right.
Speaker AOn the surface, this can feel harmless, even justified.
Speaker ABut as Jake and Sarah pointed out, every time you focus on proving your point, someone else is made to feel wrong.
Speaker AAnd when that happens in close relationships, trust and connection slowly erode.
Speaker AWinning an argument might feel good for a moment, but over time it often costs you the peace and closeness you actually want.
Speaker ASecond, Jake and Sarah highlighted the role ego plays in fueling anger.
Speaker AMany arguments stop being about the issue itself and turn into a battle to protect your sense of self.
Speaker AThe moment you notice that shift from solving a problem to defending your ego, that's your early warning sign.
Speaker ACatching it early gives you the chance to pause before anger takes over.
Speaker AThird, Jake and Sarah explored a practical alternative to choosing understanding instead of trying to be right.
Speaker ALetting go of the need to be right doesn't mean you agree with your partner or give up your values.
Speaker AIt means you're willing to understand why your partner sees things the way they do.
Speaker AAsking questions, listening carefully, and acknowledging their perspective can completely change the emotional tone of a conversation, especially in the heat of the moment.
Speaker AAnd finally, Jake and Sarah shared how powerful this shift can be in real life.
Speaker AWhether it's on the road, at home, or at work.
Speaker AChoosing calm over correctness reduces stress, lowers anger, and creates safer, healthier relationships.
Speaker AOver time, people around you feel less defensive and you feel more at ease within yourself.
Speaker ANow remember too, that real change doesn't happen by just listening.
Speaker AReal change happens when you start practicing these ideas in your everyday life.
Speaker ASo if something today stood out to you, take it, run with it, and see what shifts.
Speaker AAnd if you'd like, help putting any of these ideas into practice, just Visit my website, angasecrets.com on this site you can access my free training, Breaking the Anger Cycle or book a free 30 minute anger assessment.
Speaker ACall to talk with me about your situation.
Speaker AAnd if you're ready to go deeper, explore the complete Anger management System, the proven program thousands have used to control their anger, master their emotions and create calmer, happier and more loving relationships.
Speaker AI'd be honored to help you on your anger management journey.
Speaker AOkay, that's it for today's episode.
Speaker AIf you enjoyed this deep dive, please follow the podcast and leave a short rating and review.
Speaker AIt helps others discover these tools and start their own anger management journey.
Speaker AAnd finally, remember, you can't control what others say or do, but you can always control what you say and do.
Speaker AAnd that's where your real power lies.
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.