UNFILTERED: Courageous Conversations about Anger and What your Fire is Trying to Tell You
In this episode of UNFILTERED: Courageous Conversations about Anger and What your fire is trying to tell you, Amy and Daphna explore the misunderstood emotion of anger, an experience many of us are taught to hide or downplay. Together, they unpack why anger is often labeled as “unprofessional” or “unproductive” and instead reframe it as a natural, informative and deeply human emotion.
They discuss how anger can signal our values, highlight boundaries and even serve as a catalyst for meaningful change when expressed with clarity and intention. From leadership to personal relationships, the conversation encourages listeners to acknowledge their emotions rather than suppress them and to use anger as a tool for understanding and conscious action.
Timestamps
00:00 – Why anger feels taboo
00:04:32 – Anger as a catalyst for action
00:09:30 – What healthy expression looks like
00:13:18 – Gender differences & perception of anger
00:19:15 – Naming the emotion beneath the reaction
00:21:24 – Speaking from clarity instead of charge
00:23:45 – The cost of suppression and artificial harmony
00:28:10 – From reaction to response in 6 steps
00:32:57 – Anger as a sign of what we value
00:33:48 – Staying connected to our emotional experiences
Connect with Your Co-Hosts
Daphna Horowitz
https://www.linkedin.com/in/daphnahorowitz/
https://www.facebook.com/PEACSolutions
https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/leadership-live/id1524072573
Amy L. Riley
http://www.courageofaleader.com
https://www.linkedin.com/in/amyshoopriley
https://courageofaleader.com/podcast/
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John, welcome to our podcast series UNFILTERED. This
Amy Riley:is where we have courageous conversations about topics that
Amy Riley:are not always discussed in the mainstream or in the workplace.
Daphna Horowitz:Here we strip away the polished surface and
Daphna Horowitz:dive into the raw, messy and deeply human topics that we
Daphna Horowitz:don't think it talked about often enough.
Amy Riley:We are your unfiltered hosts. I'm Amy from
Amy Riley:the Courage of a Leader podcast,
Daphna Horowitz:and I'm Daphna from Leadership Live podcast
Daphna Horowitz:with two coaches from two sides of the world who believe that
Daphna Horowitz:real growth happens in the uncomfortable, unspoken moments
Daphna Horowitz:from
Amy Riley:Workplace trauma to dealing with major life changes
Amy Riley:and taboo topics like grief, imposter syndrome and menopause.
Amy Riley:This is the space where nothing is off limits.
Daphna Horowitz:So if you're ready for honest, bold and
Daphna Horowitz:sometimes messy conversations, let's get into it. We've all
Daphna Horowitz:been there that moment when something happens at work or at
Daphna Horowitz:home and you feel the heat rise inside you, you tell yourself to
Daphna Horowitz:stay calm, stay professional, don't let it show, but you
Daphna Horowitz:didn't manage to keep it all under wraps.
Amy Riley:Yes, and we have been taught that this emotion, this
Amy Riley:anger, is bad, that it's unprofessional, that it's
Amy Riley:unproductive, that we have to keep that under wraps. But what
Amy Riley:if anger isn't the problem,
Daphna Horowitz:exactly, and that's what we're going to be
Daphna Horowitz:talking about today. Why does anger get such a bad rap, how it
Daphna Horowitz:shows up in leadership and in life, and what do we do with it?
Amy Riley:Yes, Daphna, it's time to get unfiltered. So,
Amy Riley:Daphna, why are we talking about anger today?
Daphna Horowitz:Yeah, right. It's a bit of a strange topic,
Daphna Horowitz:because I can imagine that maybe some people will be listening
Daphna Horowitz:and going, Well, I'm actually a pretty calm person. I don't
Daphna Horowitz:really get angry, and so maybe I don't listen. Don't need to
Daphna Horowitz:listen to this. But I'm saying, Hold on, hold on. I think
Daphna Horowitz:there'll be value for everyone. And for me, it really comes down
Daphna Horowitz:to the fact that it's completely natural to get angry, and under
Daphna Horowitz:the label of angry can come irritation, annoyed, upset,
Daphna Horowitz:frustrated, frustrated, exactly. There are so many things. Are
Daphna Horowitz:the little things that start to bubble up. But we dare not say
Daphna Horowitz:the word anger, because that somehow has got such a bad
Daphna Horowitz:reputation. We are not allowed to feel angry. And I think
Amy Riley:it's too much. It's too much. We can feel irritated,
Amy Riley:we can feel slightly disappointed, we can express
Amy Riley:that. But for some reason, anger has that taboo Exactly. You're
Amy Riley:not supposed to be angry because then you're a hot head, you're
Amy Riley:out of control.
Daphna Horowitz:Yeah, we've been brought up with the fact
Daphna Horowitz:that we aren't allowed to get angry. And I think why we wanted
Daphna Horowitz:to talk about it today is because anger isn't the bad
Daphna Horowitz:thing or the bad emotion or the bad person. Yeah, it's not
Daphna Horowitz:anger. Anger is a completely natural, normal emotion, and
Daphna Horowitz:we're going to go into it can even be a good emotion. But we
Daphna Horowitz:really want to separate right from the outset. We want to
Daphna Horowitz:separate between the emotion, feeling angry about something,
Daphna Horowitz:and how we behave. And I think our behaviors, as you said, the
Daphna Horowitz:aggression, throwing a chair, screaming at someone, going into
Daphna Horowitz:a tantrum, those behaviors are not great, those behaviors we
Daphna Horowitz:want to avoid, those we might not really be okay to express it
Daphna Horowitz:in that way, in public or even in private. I don't know. We
Daphna Horowitz:need to understand what anger is. What is it here to tell us,
Daphna Horowitz:and then how do you want to express it or channel it in a
Daphna Horowitz:more healthy way?
Amy Riley:Yes, yes. So we are saying clearly that the emotion
Amy Riley:of anger is not the enemy here, not something that we have to
Amy Riley:immediately suppress like, Oh, this is bad. This is too much
Amy Riley:coming up inside of my body, but instead letting that be there,
Amy Riley:this is anger. This is an emotion. What is it telling me
Amy Riley:in this moment? And I'm a human being, yeah, so
Daphna Horowitz:Okay, anger is okay. And I'm just thinking as
Daphna Horowitz:we talking, how many times does it happen that someone says, are
Daphna Horowitz:you angry? And immediately, no, no, I'm not angry. I'm not
Daphna Horowitz:angry, you know, yeah, and you can tell from the tone of voice,
Daphna Horowitz:so I'm just really wanting everyone listening to just take
Daphna Horowitz:a moment and think when we rush, I'm not angry. I'm not angry.
Daphna Horowitz:What is it in the tone? What happened there? What happens in
Daphna Horowitz:our body when we get angry? How do you recognize that?
Amy Riley:Yes, and one more thing, Daphna, before we shift,
Amy Riley:if you are. Human being who cares, to a degree, about
Amy Riley:things, people, situations, phenomenons. In our world, you
Amy Riley:are gonna feel strong emotions about that from time to time. So
Amy Riley:you are gonna feel anger. It's okay. It's because you care.
Amy Riley:It's because you have something at stake, and we'll talk more
Amy Riley:about that.
Daphna Horowitz:Yeah, okay. Are we talking about it now? Is
Daphna Horowitz:there something more to say? No, I think that's good. I wanted
Daphna Horowitz:to, like, jump in there and say, yeah. The best part is linking
Daphna Horowitz:anger to passion and saying, when you have a strong emotion,
Daphna Horowitz:such as anger about something. It really means that you are
Daphna Horowitz:passionate about something. You're usually angry when you
Daphna Horowitz:see an injustice. You see something that's been unfair.
Daphna Horowitz:You see something that's just not working the way that you
Daphna Horowitz:think it should, or the way you you know out of alignment with
Daphna Horowitz:your values. Often the things that get us really angry means
Daphna Horowitz:that something's happened that is out of alignment with our
Daphna Horowitz:values, and it really directly links to what we are passionate
Daphna Horowitz:about. What are the things that mean the most to us? So if you
Daphna Horowitz:look at activists who are really out there to change the
Daphna Horowitz:injustices of the world, they come from an angry place of it
Daphna Horowitz:can't be that there is so much poverty, that there's so much
Daphna Horowitz:violence, that there's so much inequality. It can't be so what
Daphna Horowitz:are we going to do about it? And that's the beauty of anger, and
Daphna Horowitz:that's actually what I want to really say a little bit about
Daphna Horowitz:now,
Amy Riley:the emotion can be a catalyst, right? And it can also
Amy Riley:show us what is important to us, right? Those those moments where
Amy Riley:you feel that emotion flare up, bubble up for you, what's the
Amy Riley:value that's being compromised in that moment? Or there could
Amy Riley:be a boundary that is being crossed for you or for a team
Amy Riley:member or for someone that you love. I mean, Daphna. I know the
Amy Riley:moments that I have been the most angry, someone has crossed
Amy Riley:a boundary of someone that I care about,
Daphna Horowitz:absolutely, absolutely.
Amy Riley:Yeah, it has. It has had me shouting in French on the
Amy Riley:street in defense of my dear friend,
Daphna Horowitz:no, it can be a friend. Can be your child. I
Daphna Horowitz:remember a situation, you know, my child and their friend were
Daphna Horowitz:in the middle of a heated argument, and then, you know,
Daphna Horowitz:the one child started just laying into my child, and I was
Daphna Horowitz:like, No, that's not then you become the fierce lioness,
Daphna Horowitz:right? Yeah. Also, I love that you've brought that in, because
Daphna Horowitz:it's, we get triggered. We get triggered and we get a strong
Daphna Horowitz:emotional response in return. That can be anger. And it's
Daphna Horowitz:important to understand, stop for a minute and say, what has
Daphna Horowitz:been triggered? Yeah, you
Amy Riley:know, yeah. Well, I also noticed in this moment,
Amy Riley:Daphna, you know, we both gave those examples of standing up
Amy Riley:and not suppressing the aim anger, expressing something in
Amy Riley:those moments, but we did it on behalf of others. Yeah, there,
Amy Riley:there's something that I'm probably more automatically
Amy Riley:repressing it when it comes to me that's right, right. Like,
Amy Riley:like, should I do? I Right? And we've got that socialized
Amy Riley:tendency to automatically repress. Don't share this. You
Amy Riley:know, you'll look too emotional, you'll look too irrational,
Amy Riley:you'll look proportionally too strong.
Daphna Horowitz:I love that distinction that you brought in,
Daphna Horowitz:because it's easy for us to go in defense of some someone that
Daphna Horowitz:we really care about, but when we are triggered for ourselves
Daphna Horowitz:and we get angry, all of a sudden, that red hot flash of,
Daphna Horowitz:you know, temper, or even, I'm gonna say, that slight annoyance
Daphna Horowitz:and irritation, because we're all different in our levels of
Daphna Horowitz:expressiveness of anger, or even being aware of what's going on
Daphna Horowitz:for us, but when we're defending, when we get angry
Daphna Horowitz:about something that's to do with us, we are taking a stand
Daphna Horowitz:for something that is important to us, as you said, whether it's
Daphna Horowitz:a value, a boundary, or something that is very
Daphna Horowitz:meaningful to us, we are going to get that emotional response,
Daphna Horowitz:and it's worthwhile noticing it. It's worthwhile noticing it and
Daphna Horowitz:changing the narrative around it, because it's not wrong. We
Daphna Horowitz:want to really change the narrative and say, What is this
Daphna Horowitz:coming to tell me, what is it pointing to that I'm really
Daphna Horowitz:passionate about or that I really care about in this
Daphna Horowitz:moment, and that's really important to understand. So stop
Daphna Horowitz:saying it's terrible to get angry, or that person was angry
Daphna Horowitz:because he, you know, road rage incident, and he came out and
Daphna Horowitz:started screaming at the next car that, yes, it's anger, but
Daphna Horowitz:it's actually aggression. It's the behavior that is so that
Daphna Horowitz:what's wrong is the aggression. Behavior, the behavior, not
Daphna Horowitz:emotion.
Amy Riley:Yeah, so we're saying, be aware of it, right?
Amy Riley:Learn from it, reframe it. We don't have to immediately feel
Amy Riley:shame and repress it. I know we did some research Daphna, and I
Amy Riley:really love what the University of Colorado studies found that
Amy Riley:expressing anger in healthy ways improves communication problem
Amy Riley:and problem solving, while suppression correlates with
Amy Riley:higher stress and poorer decision Exactly.
Daphna Horowitz:So think about the meeting where you have
Daphna Horowitz:something really important to say, Well, someone has said
Daphna Horowitz:something that you know is wrong because you've done some
Daphna Horowitz:background research, or you've done some calculations or
Daphna Horowitz:whatever analysis, and you know that someone's just said
Daphna Horowitz:something that is incorrect, but maybe you don't understand or
Daphna Horowitz:remember the exact detail of it. So now you're not sure if you
Daphna Horowitz:should say something or not say something, and you kind of
Daphna Horowitz:battling with us because you don't want to rock the boat and
Daphna Horowitz:you don't want to, but there's something in you because you can
Daphna Horowitz:feel this, you know, frustration rise or irritation rise because
Daphna Horowitz:you know that this person is leading the meeting in the wrong
Daphna Horowitz:way. What are you going to do with that? And I want to say
Daphna Horowitz:that just noticing that moment of irritation or frustration or
Daphna Horowitz:what's actually going on here, I feel like this person's leading
Daphna Horowitz:me astray that is already pointing to something that is
Daphna Horowitz:important for you to whether maybe it's a truth or a
Daphna Horowitz:different perspective that is worth voicing in the room, and
Daphna Horowitz:just understand, okay, take that moment to say, why is this
Daphna Horowitz:coming up for me now? What am I feeling and what is it pointing
Daphna Horowitz:to? It's pointing to the fact that I have something that I
Daphna Horowitz:want to add to this conversation.
Amy Riley:Yes, I love your passion around this subject, and
Amy Riley:another thing I wanted to put into the conversation, as you
Amy Riley:were saying that you're saying like, as we feel the emotion
Amy Riley:coming up, as we're feeling that inside of our bodies, I think it
Amy Riley:could be worth having everybody stop for a moment and think
Amy Riley:about how those physical sensations manifest in each of
Amy Riley:our bodies. Because sometimes we're like we're quick to anger,
Amy Riley:right? And I know that I've had times where I haven't noticed it
Amy Riley:consciously in time, my amygdala hijack is going right, but I
Amy Riley:haven't noticed it consciously in that moment to be able to
Amy Riley:take that intentional pause, right? And then I'm
Amy Riley:automatically going to one side of the continuum or the other
Amy Riley:I'm expressing without full processing, or I'm repressing
Amy Riley:automatically. But if we can tune into those physical
Amy Riley:sensations, it could give us another beat. It could give us
Amy Riley:another moment to notice what's going on. So some people will
Amy Riley:get red in the neck, right? Some people will feel, you know,
Amy Riley:bubbles are turning in their stomach. You know, others
Daphna Horowitz:heartbeat faster, yeah, shortness of
Daphna Horowitz:breath. You know, you want to say something. For some people
Daphna Horowitz:not come very naturally. They can actually just express what
Daphna Horowitz:they want to say. Give a difference of opinion. I don't
Daphna Horowitz:agree with you, and they do it very elegantly. There's some
Daphna Horowitz:people who naturally can do that, but for some people, they,
Daphna Horowitz:you know, there's a bit of that, you know, fear of I don't know.
Daphna Horowitz:I want to say something. How am I gonna say it?
Amy Riley:So, yeah, so if everybody can just think about
Amy Riley:that right now, how does it manifest in your body? So that
Amy Riley:that can be a signal to you, right? It's coming. I don't have
Amy Riley:to repress it. Yeah, exactly. It's coming. I'm gonna, I'm
Amy Riley:gonna notice what it's telling me here,
Daphna Horowitz:exactly, exactly. And then also, we
Daphna Horowitz:wanted to talk a little bit about gender differences.
Amy Riley:Gender differences, yeah, yes,
Daphna Horowitz:but there's a little bit of a double standard
Daphna Horowitz:when it comes to anger and perhaps being a little bit more
Daphna Horowitz:assertive, you know, around stuff when it comes to men and
Daphna Horowitz:women.
Amy Riley:Yes, I'd love to go right to what Yale study found.
Amy Riley:Yale study found that men's anger increased their perceived
Amy Riley:competence, while women's anger decreased theirs.
Daphna Horowitz:How crazy is that? Yeah,
Amy Riley:it is, it is it is crazy. And if you're a female
Amy Riley:out there who thinks, oh yeah, my immediate reaction is to
Amy Riley:suppress exactly right. Some of that can much of that comes from
Amy Riley:how society interprets and reacts to a female showing
Amy Riley:emotion, showing passion. Right?
Daphna Horowitz:So when a woman shows emotion, then it's you're
Daphna Horowitz:getting emotional. When a woman is angry, you're getting
Daphna Horowitz:emotional, you're rational, yeah. And then I think there's
Daphna Horowitz:also something in women, and we generalizing here, and of
Daphna Horowitz:course, everyone's different, but in general, women will
Daphna Horowitz:maybe, if they have an outburst, I think they'll end up feeling
Daphna Horowitz:much worse about it afterwards than men, because for men, it's
Daphna Horowitz:showing dominance and control and power and okay, they can be
Daphna Horowitz:forgiven a little bit of a angry outburst, but women takes a lot
Daphna Horowitz:more to kind of smooth that over and becomes maybe a little bit
Daphna Horowitz:of the perception that follows this woman.
Amy Riley:Yeah, I told I told you this Daphne, not too long
Amy Riley:ago, I had an exchange, and I got assertive. And it was
Amy Riley:actually, yeah, I actually intentionally decided to get
Amy Riley:assertive in that moment, I had a message to share, and I shared
Amy Riley:it right, and I had to stick with it to have myself be heard.
Amy Riley:But then walking away, I probably had two steps of like,
Amy Riley:okay, great, good for you, Amy. And then I turned into, Oh, was
Amy Riley:it too much like, you know, like somebody observed that, what are
Amy Riley:they thinking? Right? Did they think? You know, what is this
Amy Riley:middle aged woman going on about? And immediately the
Amy Riley:judgment came in there, and I thought, isn't this so
Amy Riley:interesting? I intentionally decided to be assertive. I was,
Amy Riley:I do not feel like I did not turn into too overly aggressive
Amy Riley:in that moment, but I still was having that reaction of beration
Amy Riley:and question and shame, and was it too much?
Daphna Horowitz:Yeah, I think because we've been conditioned,
Daphna Horowitz:we've been conditioned to not express too much. And I know
Daphna Horowitz:that women are culturally conditioned to stay likable,
Daphna Horowitz:while men are culturally conditioned to be in control,
Daphna Horowitz:you know. And I think there's a big difference there, and the
Daphna Horowitz:likable incompetence is very much linked as well, because the
Daphna Horowitz:more likable they've been, there's been research done about
Daphna Horowitz:that, as well as the more likable you come across, the
Daphna Horowitz:less competent people assume that you are. And that's also
Daphna Horowitz:something that kind of can get added into this mix. But then
Daphna Horowitz:when women try to reduce their likability factor and be more
Daphna Horowitz:assertive, they get kind of was criticized for that as well,
Daphna Horowitz:that it isn't fully accepted.
Amy Riley:Yes, yes, yeah, yeah. I mean, I know we're gonna go
Amy Riley:into you know, how do we shift this from reacting to having
Amy Riley:that thoughtful response? I gotta say, overall for me,
Amy Riley:often, what I need to tune into is, what is my commitment? What
Amy Riley:is my commitment in the big picture, right? And setting
Amy Riley:aside how likable, or because I want people to like me, right?
Amy Riley:But setting aside how likable Am I in the moment. But here's
Amy Riley:something I care about. Here's the commitment that's pulling me
Amy Riley:forward. So I'm going to speak up. I'm going to say something,
Amy Riley:even if I don't do it perfectly. Yeah.
Daphna Horowitz:And I think that this now really gets to
Daphna Horowitz:that place of the separation, which I think is so important.
Daphna Horowitz:What we were really alluding was saying before is that just the
Daphna Horowitz:separation between what is the emotion and what is the response
Daphna Horowitz:or behavior as a result, and then what is the impact of that
Daphna Horowitz:behavior and response. So when we have a certain emotion and we
Daphna Horowitz:want to have a certain impact, then we can't have that
Daphna Horowitz:automated, triggered response with our thinking, because we're
Daphna Horowitz:probably not going to have the impact that we want. And that's
Daphna Horowitz:something you know that, because I am a very expressive,
Daphna Horowitz:passionate person, you might speak about a topic that I'm
Daphna Horowitz:really passionate about, and people can think that I'm angry,
Daphna Horowitz:and then the impact is just not there. So that's also sometimes
Daphna Horowitz:a misinterpretation of Express expressiveness or passion, or,
Daphna Horowitz:you know, the tone that you use in how you speak, but bringing
Daphna Horowitz:it back to anger, it really is about understanding when I'm
Daphna Horowitz:angry, really noticing that, and saying, Well, how do I want to
Daphna Horowitz:express myself so that I have the impact that I want to have
Daphna Horowitz:in the situation and not how do you okay? I'm angry. We're not
Daphna Horowitz:saying anger is okay. Be angry. Do what you want, because co
Daphna Horowitz:chairs no in all that. Be good. You're not going to have the
Daphna Horowitz:impact that you want. Your message is not going to be
Daphna Horowitz:heard. It's not going to land in the way that you want. But
Daphna Horowitz:really, really, really important upfront is to recognize it first
Daphna Horowitz:and foremost.
Amy Riley:Yes, yes, yes. Actually, we're going to share
Amy Riley:five steps with you, from reacting to relating and
Amy Riley:respond, giving yourself the best chance of having that
Amy Riley:impact that you want to have in the moment, like you're talking
Amy Riley:about Daphna. So step one is acknowledge it, and that's to
Amy Riley:ourselves. First, it's
Daphna Horowitz:noticing, actually, just notice that this
Daphna Horowitz:is what's going on for you. Hey, oh my gosh, like you said, those
Daphna Horowitz:body responses. My heart starting to beat. My mouth is
Daphna Horowitz:going dry. My breath is short, something, you know, sweat
Daphna Horowitz:glands or pouring whatever it is. Yes, notice the response,
Daphna Horowitz:because when you can notice it for yourself, that's the first
Daphna Horowitz:first step. Step is being aware and acknowledging it.
Amy Riley:I'm angry and it's okay. Yeah. Second step, yeah,
Amy Riley:and that acknowledging it is like letting
Daphna Horowitz:us noticing, oh, what's going on for me,
Daphna Horowitz:what's going on for me right now. My breath is short. Oh, I'm
Daphna Horowitz:feeling a little bit tense, or whatever it is, noticing,
Daphna Horowitz:observing,
Amy Riley:it's it's neutral, yeah, I'm angry, not the Bad.
Amy Riley:Bad. Anger is here without I don't want to be here. Yeah,
Amy Riley:acknowledge without judgment is the perfect way to say it. And
Amy Riley:then step two, name, what protecting? Okay, right? What's
Amy Riley:the value that's at stake, what's the boundary that has
Amy Riley:been crossed, what's being threatened? Is it my time? Is it
Amy Riley:the team's time? Is it my integrity?
Daphna Horowitz:Is it okay, okay, okay, sorry. So I think
Daphna Horowitz:I'm I'm like a step behind, because I think for me, there's
Daphna Horowitz:two elements there, sorry, in your first step of the
Daphna Horowitz:acknowledging. I have notice and name. So I think that noticing
Daphna Horowitz:it is notice that this is happening for me in my body.
Daphna Horowitz:Naming it is naming it I am angry, or I am frustrated, or I
Daphna Horowitz:am annoyed. That is the second naming it. And then you bring it
Daphna Horowitz:into name what it's protecting, which is already another layer.
Daphna Horowitz:It's that deep.
Amy Riley:We are shifting to six steps in this moment.
Daphna Horowitz:Added a step in there. Okay, I'm actually, and I
Amy Riley:actually this is going to be easier to remember
Amy Riley:if we have all the ends,
Daphna Horowitz:name it right,
Amy Riley:and then name what it's protecting
Daphna Horowitz:exactly what value is it pointing to, what is
Daphna Horowitz:it pointing to that is important to you, that is meaningful to
Daphna Horowitz:you, that is a boundary that's being crossed, or that's a
Daphna Horowitz:person that you care about, whatever it is, understand what
Daphna Horowitz:is the thing you really, really care about in there. That's the
Daphna Horowitz:second naming. Got it.
Amy Riley:Notice name, name, and then pause. When you need to
Amy Riley:pause. We need to create some space here before the response,
Amy Riley:because we still have that flood of cortisol, and we still have
Amy Riley:the emotive part of our brain that is lit up and going Fight,
Amy Riley:fight or freeze, it's time to protect the human So pause. I
Amy Riley:mean, this doesn't have to be for 10 minutes. It can be for a
Amy Riley:few seconds, or even
Daphna Horowitz:a breath. Take a deep breath. Back a couple of
Daphna Horowitz:deep breaths. Yeah. But it can also be, I do say to my clients,
Daphna Horowitz:sometimes, if something's happened and you understand
Daphna Horowitz:something's going on for you, that you need a little bit of
Daphna Horowitz:space. Create that space for yourself. Say, I need a few
Daphna Horowitz:minutes to just go to the bathroom. Go to the bathroom,
Daphna Horowitz:take some breaths. Throw water on splash water on your face, or
Daphna Horowitz:whatever it is, just that walk and you know, walk to the
Daphna Horowitz:bathroom, walk back. That can help you to take that pause, to
Daphna Horowitz:regain composure and calm down the amygdala and get your
Daphna Horowitz:cognitive brain thinking again.
Amy Riley:If you can do that, that's ideal. Now definitely. I
Amy Riley:also want to acknowledge that someone might be in the middle
Amy Riley:of a meeting, yeah, right, if something's been brought up,
Amy Riley:this is, this is the space like it's not right. You want to say
Amy Riley:something in that moment, those few deep breaths, tell your
Amy Riley:brain that the human is not running from a tiger. You know,
Amy Riley:you don't have to be in survival mode. Let the brain activity go
Amy Riley:to the prefrontal cortex. And I actually just picked up my pen,
Amy Riley:right? And do that. I'm angry. Here's what it's protecting,
Amy Riley:right? Like, take that moment to make a few notes, yeah, so that
Amy Riley:you can do the next step, which is communicate from clarity, not
Amy Riley:from charge, right? I'm just like charged and I'm reacting,
Amy Riley:but instead, communicate from clarity. And I think it could be
Amy Riley:good to get some go to statements. Here. Daphna, I'm
Amy Riley:frustrated because this matters to me, or I'd like to time out.
Amy Riley:I think we need to reset expectations. Or I care about
Amy Riley:this too much to stay silent, right? I think this is going to
Amy Riley:have an impact on our customers that we haven't thought through
Amy Riley:thoroughly, right? Or I think, I think we just trampled on
Amy Riley:somebody's feelings there. Let's pause for a moment, right? And
Amy Riley:what's that? That statement that you use to open up the
Amy Riley:conversation you want to open up in that moment.
Daphna Horowitz:And I do think it's a really good idea for you
Daphna Horowitz:to have a statement that you can go to. It's kind of like
Daphna Horowitz:something that you practice or hold on a sec. I need a moment
Daphna Horowitz:to think through this, or even, even if it's just a statement,
Daphna Horowitz:because I think that when we're going through this emotional
Daphna Horowitz:journey, and it's happening in the moment, and you want to
Daphna Horowitz:address it, sometimes it's hard to name what is going on in the
Daphna Horowitz:room. It takes a lot of courage to say, you know, we need to
Daphna Horowitz:reset expectations, or I'm frustrated because it matters to
Daphna Horowitz:me, those words may not come off the tongue so easily. So I do
Daphna Horowitz:think even saying hold it a sec, I need a moment to think about
Daphna Horowitz:it. Or if someone's asking you to do something just that kind
Daphna Horowitz:of even that can be a go to statement of I need to think
Daphna Horowitz:about this. I'll get back to you because you can't respond in the
Daphna Horowitz:moment. And you do need, it doesn't have to be in the moment
Daphna Horowitz:at that time. I think if you've noticed it, you've named it,
Daphna Horowitz:you've been able to see what's underneath it. What is it that
Daphna Horowitz:matters to you so much? And then you can actually say, I need, I
Daphna Horowitz:need to think about this, or I need to, yeah, take a few
Daphna Horowitz:breaths, give yourself the pause and decide that you will handle
Daphna Horowitz:it later. I think that's also
Amy Riley:yep, yep, yep, yeah. I actually love that you can
Amy Riley:have a go to statement for, I'm going to open up a conversation
Amy Riley:in this moment. And you can have a go to statement for, I need to
Amy Riley:buy my son. Exactly. Yeah, yeah, that, yeah, yeah. And then I
Amy Riley:don't know if we need step six. Step Six was going to be
Amy Riley:Channel, Channel, the energy into movement.
Daphna Horowitz:That's good, I think, yeah, good. Because truth
Daphna Horowitz:is that emotion, any emotion, and especially when it's a
Daphna Horowitz:strong emotion, it's energy in motion, emotion. So what
Daphna Horowitz:actually happens with emotions? It's an energy inside of us, and
Daphna Horowitz:it's got to go somewhere. So if we can notice it and actually
Daphna Horowitz:get up and get yourself a cup of coffee, make some kind of
Daphna Horowitz:movement that allows the energy to flow. Yeah, actually also
Daphna Horowitz:helps in releasing that pent up emotion. So I'm saying even if
Daphna Horowitz:you're in a meeting, you can just get up and stand. Sometimes
Daphna Horowitz:people get up and stand and kind of shake their legs a little bit
Daphna Horowitz:because they've been sitting for too long. Or there's a coffee
Daphna Horowitz:bar in the corner, and you can go over there and just make
Daphna Horowitz:yourself a cup of coffee. There are ways that you can find that
Daphna Horowitz:you can go into motion without anybody necessarily noticing
Daphna Horowitz:that this is what you're doing. Excellent.
Amy Riley:Okay, I actually was thinking about it differently.
Amy Riley:Daphna, so I love that you went to physical movement. I was also
Amy Riley:thinking energetically like, like, how much the anger charge
Amy Riley:has on us. So if we notice it, if we name the emotion, if we
Amy Riley:name what it's protecting, we take that pause, and then we
Amy Riley:communicate from clarity, right? Like, in that communication,
Amy Riley:we've taken some of the charge out of what we're going to say
Amy Riley:in that moment, but then, like, the emotion is still there,
Amy Riley:right? We Still Care. So then I've seen like, as the
Amy Riley:conversation continues, or when you come back to the
Amy Riley:conversation, like, allow that emotional energy into the
Amy Riley:exchange. We can. We can't express our emotion like we
Amy Riley:said, not by throwing chairs, not by getting forcefully
Amy Riley:aggressive in a moment. But why can't we have some emotion get
Amy Riley:into our voice? Why can't we show that passion like channel
Amy Riley:that energy for positive you are? I've already given us
Amy Riley:examples of how we can use that strong emotion as a catalyst to
Amy Riley:reform things in our world.
Daphna Horowitz:Yeah, it's true. I love what she's saying,
Daphna Horowitz:because it can really be an opportunity to say this matters.
Daphna Horowitz:This matters to me, this matters to us, or even an exploration of
Daphna Horowitz:this is really what matters to me, what matters to you, you
Daphna Horowitz:know, and as as if I understand you correctly, you're saying,
Daphna Horowitz:Bring that emotion into the conversation. What really
Daphna Horowitz:matters here for us? Why are we getting so heated up? Because we
Daphna Horowitz:both really passionate about something, something matters to
Daphna Horowitz:us. And often I find especially. In working with people in
Daphna Horowitz:conflict situations where there is a heated argument about, say,
Daphna Horowitz:the way to do something, what matters to them? That is the
Daphna Horowitz:same thing. What's important? Often, yeah, often the same
Daphna Horowitz:thing. They both want the success of the project or the
Daphna Horowitz:goal or the team or the person, whatever it is, the success of
Daphna Horowitz:the situation is equally important to both those people.
Daphna Horowitz:They just have a difference of opinion about how they should go
Daphna Horowitz:about resolving it or doing it, or what the next step should be.
Daphna Horowitz:And if you can for a moment, say, what is it that matters to
Daphna Horowitz:clearly, we passionate. Yeah, when you see anger in the room,
Daphna Horowitz:rename it say, clearly, we're passionate Yeah, what are we
Daphna Horowitz:passionate? What are we each passionate about? I'm willing to
Daphna Horowitz:bet 70% of the time or 70% of what they are passionate about
Daphna Horowitz:will be exactly the same.
Amy Riley:Yes, yes. So Daphna, I mean, I'm hearing, can we be
Amy Riley:with people expressing their opinions with an with emotion,
Amy Riley:emotional charge to that. And also it can be a really useful
Amy Riley:strategy in those exchanges to also acknowledge what's the
Amy Riley:common ground? Yeah, what's the common goal? I mean, even if you
Amy Riley:have to go pretty far up, right, we both care about providing a
Amy Riley:good service to our customer, right, we may have fundamentally
Amy Riley:different thoughts about how we're right and and can we, can
Amy Riley:we both express what we care about and why we care about it
Amy Riley:in that moment?
Daphna Horowitz:Yeah, yeah, I think that's really I love.
Daphna Horowitz:Where this conversation is has gone, and where it started and
Daphna Horowitz:where it's led to. Because I think that the whole thing
Daphna Horowitz:around anger and I guess any other strong emotion that we
Daphna Horowitz:feel is that there is to always know, that there is validity to
Daphna Horowitz:it, that it is okay, there is there are no bad emotions,
Daphna Horowitz:really? No, it's very human. How do we want to actually give
Daphna Horowitz:expression to our anger in a way that is healthy and lands well
Daphna Horowitz:and has the impact that we wanted to have? And I think that
Daphna Horowitz:the six step, seven step, five step, it was, I think we had
Daphna Horowitz:steps with offshoots. Yes, the tips that we gave here are
Daphna Horowitz:really, really helpful in terms of really understanding and
Daphna Horowitz:acknowledging what it is that's going on. What is it pointing
Daphna Horowitz:to? Because that is really the main thing for me here, is, what
Daphna Horowitz:is it pointing to? What is the message that it's trying to tell
Daphna Horowitz:us? What is it that we really care about, and then taking that
Daphna Horowitz:pause, moving finding that sentence, finding that
Daphna Horowitz:statement, taking the break, and then coming back to it in a much
Daphna Horowitz:cleaner space where you're not emotionally charged and you can
Daphna Horowitz:actually land your message with impact.
Amy Riley:So don't immediately suppress that anger. The goal
Amy Riley:isn't to calm down. The goal is to get clear.
Daphna Horowitz:Yeah, yeah. And, and actually, just another
Daphna Horowitz:thing to add to that is the whole idea of a calm and
Daphna Horowitz:composed leader. I think that's something that's really
Daphna Horowitz:important, and we value that. But sometimes these people might
Daphna Horowitz:be suppressing a whole lot of emotions that could be creating
Daphna Horowitz:artificial harmony rather than real harmony. So that's also
Daphna Horowitz:something we really want to be real. That's what we're talking
Daphna Horowitz:about, right? We want to be real?
Amy Riley:Yes, let's leave listeners with an inquiry before
Amy Riley:we wrap Daphna stillness, our moment of stillness, yeah, you
Amy Riley:have some options here.
Daphna Horowitz:Maybe, yeah. Shall we take a breath first of
Daphna Horowitz:all, yeah, and really land that moment of stillness. And I think
Daphna Horowitz:the question I want to leave our listeners with is, where does my
Daphna Horowitz:anger actually show me what I care about the most
Amy Riley:love that question, and it shows us that our anger
Amy Riley:is rooted in great intentions. Folks, if you know anyone else
Amy Riley:who needs to hear this? This episode about anger, and how are
Amy Riley:all humans who care and we all all experience anger at some
Amy Riley:point? Please share it. Please leave a comment. Let us know
Amy Riley:what you thought about this topic. Let us know other topics
Amy Riley:that you might want us to discuss in an unfiltered way.
Daphna Horowitz:Yeah, and until next time, stay connected, and
Daphna Horowitz:I'm saying connected to whatever emotion you're feeling with stay
Daphna Horowitz:courageous and stay unfiltered. That's a wrap on this episode of
Daphna Horowitz:unfiltered, where we have courageous conversations about
Daphna Horowitz:topic. That are not often discussed in depth. We hope this
Daphna Horowitz:conversation sparked something in you, whether it's a new
Daphna Horowitz:perspective, a moment of reflection, or just the
Daphna Horowitz:reassurance that you're not alone.
Amy Riley:If you found this episode meaningful, please share
Amy Riley:it with someone who needs to hear it, and if you have a topic
Amy Riley:that you'd love for us to tackle, let us know we are
Amy Riley:always up for conversations that don't get talked about enough.
Daphna Horowitz:Don't forget to subscribe. Leave a review and
Daphna Horowitz:connect with us on LinkedIn. All our details are in the show
Daphna Horowitz:notes, because the best conversations don't end here
Amy Riley:until next time. Stay curious, stay courageous and
Amy Riley:stay unfiltered, foreign. You.