I feel like this guy some times

I feel like this guy some times

I’ve been doing a lot of work around anger lately; an emotion that I used to suppress and internalise much to my detriment. It’s not healthy to suck down your rage. Now that I’ve started to release the internal pressure cooker, things have become a little explosive and everything seems to be pissing me off.

So for your amusement, here are my Top 10 Things That Make Me Angry:

#10: Being Ignored

I’m at the cash register at the local farmers market last weekend, and the guy behind the counter is too busy talking to his mate next to him to get around to serving me. I’m not actually in a hurry until the point where I start being ignored. Then suddenly time becomes of the essence.

“Hello!!! Would you mind actually serving me, instead of just talking to your mate? I got shit to do today!”

One day soon I’ll have the confidence to actually say it, rather than just think it.

#9: Unsolicited Advice

Since when did everyone on the planet become a life coach? Seems like every second day someone is dispensing unsolicited advice that I didn’t ask for, don’t need and think isn’t even very well suited to the problems I’m facing. Yet the stream of bullshit keeps flowing my way.

Well [intlink id=”1930″ type=”page”]I actually am a life coach[/intlink]. When I’m coaching a client, giving advice is the last thing I do. First I validate their feelings and make sure we both fully understand the problem; consciously and unconsciously. Then we deal with unconscious blockages. Then I ask them what they think they should do to solve their own problem. I only ever offer advice if I know of some resource that they’re genuinely not aware of, and when I’m on top of my game I only do it after getting them to explore the options first. Then I’ll task them with it as homework. Given that they’re paying me to coach them, it’s hardly unsolicited!

Unsolicited advice is a whole different story. Shove that up your ass where it belongs.

#8: Abandonment Conditioning

Ivan Pavlov worked out that you can condition animals with rewards and punishment, much to the delight of pet owners everywhere. Given that humans are animals, many people have worked out that you can condition responses from humans too; and some controlling, manipulative authority figures use physical, social or emotional abandonment as their chosen form of punishment.

Catholics call it “excommunication”, Scientologists call it “disconnection”, controlling parents call it “time out”; I call it bloody annoying. It’s especially annoying when done in response to my legitimate feelings, because other people can’t handle their feelings.

#7: Pretending Not To Be Angry

One of my counsellors described environments where everyone habitually denies their feelings as crazy-making. It’s the best and most succinct description I’ve come across for the impact of collective emotional repression and denial. It drives me nuts when an angry person responds with raging denial when I offer empathy for the fact that they’re clearly angry.

The conversation tends to go like this:

Them: “&@^$*&*@#&$^!”

Me: “Sounds like you’re angry.”

Them: “I AM NOT ANGRY!!!”

The reason your heart is racing, your throat is tensing up and you’re shouting at me is because you’re angry. There’s nothing wrong with being angry, but it would make both our lives a whole lot easier if you could learn to identify/accept/acknowledge your anger… instead of denying and dumping it on me. Quit pretending that you’re a robot and start acting like an actual human.

#6: The Forgiveness Speech

Another variant of people pretending not to be angry is when they launch into what I call The Forgiveness Speech when I start talking about my experience of anger. It’s the one that goes:

“You need to learn to forgive”

or

“Being angry is like drinking poison and expecting the other person to die”

… or some other enlightened wisdom. These people really piss me off. It’s not that what they are saying is wrong, it’s the fact that invariably they’re saying it to avoid the fact that deep down they’re full of unacknowledged rage that they don’t want to face.

#5: Being Told I’m Wrong, When I’m Not

Another thing I really hate is being told that I’m wrong, when I’m not. Especially when it’s by a stupid person being aggressive. Or aggressively stupid. Bad, bad combination. Don’t even get me started on the topic of religious nonsense or people trying to push their limiting beliefs onto me.

I relate to the quote by Bertrand Russell:

“The fundamental cause of the trouble is that in the modern world the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt.”

Stupid people telling me that I’m the one that’s wrong, really piss me off.

#4: Denying My Experience

People telling me that I’m wrong about my own experience really gets me. Who is the expert on my own experience? I am, obviously, because I was at the centre of it. I might well be wrong about my interpretation of what happened, my feelings about it might seem irrational (well duh, they are feelings after all) and my memory of it may be flawed; but it’s still my experience. Don’t go rejecting my reality and substituting your own just because you don’t want to deal with the truth.

#3: Not Feeling Heard

I get that other people’s point of view is important to them, and sometimes my feelings, opinions or beliefs might seem like a threat. That’s no excuse for not listening to me when I have some emotions running that I’d like to have acknowledged. The problem isn’t really so much that other people are not listening, since I’m sure their eardrums are vibrating nicely, their ossicles are amplifying appropriately and their auditory nerve and auditory cortex are working just fine.

It’s that I’m not getting any empathic feedback to allow me to feel heard.

If my feelings, beliefs or opinions are really too frightening to acknowledge, get yourself some therapy to learn to deal with it, rather than shutting me down.

#2: Being Talked Over

When you talk, I listen. When I talk, you listen. This is how a respectful conversation works. It’s not rocket science. I get especially angry when other people start talking over me just because they don’t like what I’m saying. This usually happens when other people get upset at what I am saying, as if simply being upset is a license to stop acting respectfully. Well it’s not.

When we’re upset is the most important time to have good boundaries based on mutual respect in place. And that means: Don’t talk over me!

#1: Criticism When I Need Empathy

By far the thing that definitely pisses me off the most is when I’m upset about something and I receive judgemental criticism instead of the compassionate empathy that my brain really needs.

Being criticised for how I feel definitely tops my list of the most annoying things on the planet.

Lately I’ve been noticing the harsh coldness of supposedly well-meaning people launching so-called “tough love at me when I’m distressed, rather than actual empathic love. It’s always an avoidance tactic because what I’m feeling is making them uncomfortable about their unresolved emotional baggage, but that doesn’t help me any when I’m upset. It just really gives me the shits.

Wear your anger on your forehead with my Make Anger Great Again cap, available now in my online store.

If this was helpful, please consider sending me a donation via PayPal to say "Thanks!"


Graham Stoney

I help comedians overcome anxiety in the present by healing emotional pain from events in your past, so you can have a future you love... and have fun doing it.

16 Comments

holly · November 4, 2023 at 3:08 am

i get really angry when people say certain things to me

holly · August 19, 2023 at 3:21 am

i get really angry when people say i’m busy and talk to me like i’m stupid

KevinB · March 25, 2022 at 11:50 am

#11 Pictures of hot guys pretending to be angry

Tip · February 9, 2022 at 7:24 am

This literally made my day knowing i’m not the only one feelings this way. sometimes i feel like i’m being toxic but truthfully that’s not the case.

    Graham Stoney · February 9, 2022 at 7:41 am

    I’m glad you liked it. People who are toxic generally don’t think they’re being toxic, so you’re probably not. Just angry. It’s normal.

      Michael · March 5, 2022 at 5:00 am

      I’m desperate for relief from my anger, if I don’t get some help with this soon it will be my final demise. Does anybody have a good therapist they could recommend

    Joanne Saltfleet · March 16, 2022 at 8:07 pm

    It’s great to know it’s not just me that feels angry at lots of these things.

    I have had interviews where I have been talking and got cut off which I think is rude just because I was saying things they didn’t want to hear and when I never got offered those jobs I was happy!

    The unwanted advice one really aggravates me and recently I felt angry when someone decided that I should do certain things and what I decided on was to keep the door open in regard to those things and perhaps do them when I decide when I am good and ready!

    Back in 2019 I got criticised for interviewing for a job on reception in a and e.

    What upset me wasn’t to do with the job in itself as I’m well aware with interviews that I’m never the only one there disappointed no what did upset me was being criticised and ordered around!

    Ok perhaps that wasn’t right for me but that was my choice to make as I have a right to my own choices about my life even if they do me harm and are irrational they are mine to make!

Graham Stoney · January 11, 2022 at 2:13 pm

Thanks for the question Jack; great to hear from a normal person. #8 is referring to the use of abandonment as a negative punishment. It’s negative because the person (typically a parent) is withholding something good, namely connection, and punishment because it’s trying to condition/manipulate the child into reducing whatever behaviour the parent doesn’t like. Parents do this when they withdraw from or isolate their child because the child’s expression of feelings or behaviour evokes an emotional response in the parent that the parent doesn’t like. An example is a parent getting angry when their child is angry, and physically leaving or putting the child into time-out.

It makes me angry because it fails to meet the child’s needs and it’s annoying when done in response to my feelings by people who can’t handle their own feelings. My mother did this all the time, and it really pissed me off.

A better approach is to empathise with the child to help them to regulate their emotions, initially through co-regulation with the parents. This requires the parent to be good at regulating their own emotions so they can tolerate their child’s initial distress without punishing them.

Jack · January 11, 2022 at 1:29 pm

(1) #8: Abandonment Conditioning Don’t understand why “Abandonment Conditioning” make you / a person angry? What you wrote is unclear. Pls explain what is “Abandonment Conditioning” and why does it make you or a person angry.

(2) you wrote in #8, “It’s especially annoying when done in response to my legitimate feelings, because other people can’t be bothered handling theirs.” What is theirs? Abandonment Conditioning?
“It’s especially annoying when done in response to my legitimate feelings, because other people can’t be bothered handling their Abandonment Conditioning.” This sentence make no sense. Pls rewrite it so normal people can understand what do you mean.

Ann · November 2, 2021 at 3:36 am

Great advice. Helpful so that I can be aware of my triggers

Grace Evangelista · November 16, 2020 at 2:18 pm

thís answer makes me happy coz i answer my module many thanks for helping me

    Graham Stoney · November 16, 2020 at 7:14 pm

    I’m so glad that telling you what makes me angry has made you happy! You’re welcome.

Sweetielsg · September 3, 2020 at 10:09 pm

This post has been SUPER helpful to me today. I don’t get ragey about that many things but the one thing that’s guaranteed to set me off is if I feel like someone I really care about has let me down in some way. In the moment I have no way of communicating rationally and if I’m completely honest with myself I’m a bit of a dick. I have to go for a walk, feel the anger in a completely self absorbed way for a good half an hour to an hour and only then can I start to gain some perspective, what were the other persons intentions? Did they mean to upset me? Can I give them some calm constructive feedback to prevent this situation from happening again? It takes a gargantuan amount of effort for me to not lash out in the moment and say something out of line. Feelings need to die, being a robot would be much simpler. Post event I feel bad and wonder why I have such an intense emotional reaction to those I love. I am highly aware that no one is perfect and things happen and I myself am not an example of a perfect human being. Ugh it’s hard work.

isadora · April 11, 2020 at 4:55 am

thanks! this article really gave me some things to think about concerning my behavior, and also had some good life lessons!

SittingStone · December 5, 2019 at 9:54 am

Wow! Thank you so much for this article. I really appreciate that I don’t have to wade through the typical convoluted PC bullshit but instead, have some of MY anger experiences validated through your straight-shooting article. Thanks again. 💯💥🔥

What makes me angry worksheet - HappierTHERAPY · July 22, 2023 at 1:37 am

[…] Stoney, G. (2022, January 11). The top 10 things that make me angry. Graham Stoney. https://grahamstoney.com/anger/the-top-10-things-that-make-me-angry […]

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