One of the things I’ve been hearing in my recent Comfort Zone to Confidence Zone programs is that participants have gotten stuck feeling angry -- angry at a frustrating boss, angry at an ex, frustrated with a difficult family member, etc.
When you are angry it creates a negative energy in you and takes your focus away from what you want to accomplish. In the program, we went over 10 strategies to turn around your anger on a dime. To give you a taste of what we discussed, here are 3 tips you can start using today:
1.) Shift your “inner voice.” When you are angry or frustrated with someone, you tend to talk to them or talk about them in your own mind. You might say variations on a theme of “Why does she do that?” or “Stop treating me that way” or “He shouldn’t have done that, it was unfair” or “You are so selfish,” etc. As long as you are talking “to” or “about” the other person in your own mind (and not doing anything in the world of reality), you are perpetuating your experience of not having any control over the situation.
You can change that in an instant if you stop talking “to” or “about” the other person, and start talking “to yourself.” Use “I” statements and focus on what you can control within the situation. Examples might include: making a game plan about what you CAN do, talking to yourself in a less harsh tone, focusing on how you can trust yourself to handle whatever is thrown at you, etc.
2.) “Cool down” your physiology. Anger and frustration “heat up” your physiology so you want to do something that "cools" you down. Try doing a breathing technique in which you breathe in slowly through your mouth, and exhale slowly through your nose. After a few breathes, you will notice a cooling effect on your tongue and a slowing down of your breath. You can do this even in the middle of a heated meeting or argument with a partner -- it will have the effect of cooling down everyone in the situation. (For much more information on this and other breathing techniques to help you get back to a focused and confident attitude, sign up for Kelley Black’s newsletter at www.balancingexec.com.)
3.) Change your perspective. When you are angry at someone else, you tend to think they are doing their behavior on purpose or in some way to get you. Try explaining the person’s behavior in a different way, i.e., tell a different story about why they are doing what they are doing. What would you think about them if you gave them the benefit of the doubt?
Generally people do what they do for a good reason. It’s their best, even if ineffective, effort to achieve the same things you want -- to feel good about themselves and accomplish their goals. If a person is doing something so hurtful , so annoying, or so ineffective it is an opportunity for you to have compassion that if this is the best they can do it won’t ever add up to a happy life for them.


























