Why we get mad -- and why it's healthy | Ryan Martin

389,317 views ・ 2019-07-11

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

Translator: Reviewer: Daban Q. Jaff
00:13
Alright, so I want you to imagine that you get a text from a friend, and it reads ...
0
13784
5064
00:18
"You will NOT believe what just happened. I'm SO MAD right now!"
1
18872
3936
00:23
So you do the dutiful thing as a friend, and you ask for details.
2
23260
3460
00:26
And they tell you a story about what happened to them
3
26744
2539
00:29
at the gym or at work or on their date last night.
4
29307
2440
00:31
And you listen and you try to understand why they're so mad.
5
31771
3325
00:35
Maybe even secretly judge whether or not they should be so mad.
6
35548
3303
00:38
(Laughter)
7
38875
2110
00:41
And maybe you even offer some suggestions.
8
41009
2076
00:43
Now, in that moment, you are doing essentially what I get to do every day,
9
43109
3540
00:46
because I'm an anger researcher,
10
46673
1880
00:48
and as an anger researcher, I spend a good part of my professional life --
11
48577
4330
00:52
who am I kidding, also my personal life --
12
52931
2778
00:55
studying why people get mad.
13
55733
1809
00:58
I study the types of thoughts they have when they get mad,
14
58042
2746
01:00
and I even study what they do when they get mad,
15
60812
2281
01:03
whether it's getting into fights or breaking things,
16
63117
2468
01:05
or even yelling at people in all caps on the internet.
17
65609
2547
01:08
(Laughter)
18
68180
984
01:09
And as you can imagine,
19
69188
1366
01:10
when people hear I'm an anger researcher,
20
70578
1983
01:12
they want to talk to me about their anger,
21
72585
2000
01:14
they want to share with me their anger stories.
22
74609
2213
01:16
And it's not because they need a therapist,
23
76846
2001
01:18
though that does sometimes happen,
24
78871
1635
01:20
it's really because anger is universal.
25
80530
1880
01:22
It's something we all feel and it's something they can relate to.
26
82434
3103
01:25
We've been feeling it since the first few months of life,
27
85561
2707
01:28
when we didn't get what we wanted in our cries of protests,
28
88292
3222
01:31
things like, "What do you mean you won't pick up the rattle, Dad,
29
91538
3365
01:34
I want it!"
30
94927
1158
01:36
(Laughter)
31
96109
1440
01:38
We feel it throughout our teenage years, as my mom can certainly attest to with me.
32
98141
4381
01:42
Sorry, Mom.
33
102546
1150
01:44
We feel it to the very end.
34
104188
1805
01:46
In fact, anger has been with us at some of the worst moments of our lives.
35
106017
3925
01:50
It's a natural and expected part of our grief.
36
110321
2850
01:53
But it's also been with us in some of the best moments of our lives,
37
113195
3213
01:56
with those special occasions like weddings and vacations
38
116432
3016
01:59
often marred by these everyday frustrations --
39
119472
2796
02:02
bad weather, travel delays --
40
122292
1520
02:03
that feel horrible in the moment,
41
123836
2004
02:05
but then are ultimately forgotten when things go OK.
42
125864
3276
02:09
I have a lot of conversations with people about their anger
43
129990
2786
02:12
and it's through those conversations that I've learned that many people,
44
132800
3397
02:16
and I bet many people in this room right now,
45
136221
2142
02:18
you see anger as a problem.
46
138387
1293
02:19
You see the way it interferes in your life,
47
139704
2054
02:21
the way it damages relationships, maybe even the ways it's scary.
48
141782
3144
02:24
And while I get all of that, I see anger a little differently,
49
144950
3206
02:28
and today, I want to tell you something really important
50
148180
2627
02:30
about your anger, and it's this:
51
150831
1532
02:32
anger is a powerful and healthy force in your life.
52
152387
3412
02:35
It's good that you feel it.
53
155823
1699
02:37
You need to feel it.
54
157546
1333
02:39
But to understand all that, we actually have to back up
55
159792
2579
02:42
and talk about why we get mad in the first place.
56
162395
2312
02:44
A lot of this goes back to the work of an anger researcher
57
164731
2762
02:47
named Dr. Jerry Deffenbacher, who wrote about this back in 1996
58
167517
4040
02:51
in a book chapter on how to deal with problematic anger.
59
171581
2679
02:54
Now, for most of us, and I bet most of you,
60
174284
2223
02:56
it feels as simple as this:
61
176531
1942
02:58
I get mad when I'm provoked.
62
178497
1548
03:00
You hear it in the language people use.
63
180506
1904
03:02
They say things like,
64
182434
1174
03:03
"It makes me so mad when people drive this slow,"
65
183632
2366
03:06
or, "I got mad because she left the milk out again."
66
186022
4045
03:10
Or my favorite,
67
190091
1157
03:11
"I don't have an anger problem -- people just need to stop messing with me."
68
191272
3646
03:14
(Laughter)
69
194942
1150
03:16
Now, in the spirit of better understanding those types of provocations,
70
196527
4185
03:20
I ask a lot of people, including my friends and colleagues and even family,
71
200736
4262
03:25
"What are the things that really get to you?
72
205022
2127
03:27
What makes you mad?"
73
207173
1341
03:28
By the way, now is a good time to point out one of the advantages
74
208538
3087
03:31
of being an anger researcher
75
211649
1349
03:33
is that I've spent more than a decade generating a comprehensive list
76
213022
3277
03:36
of all the things that really irritate my colleagues.
77
216323
3160
03:39
Just in case I need it.
78
219507
1380
03:40
(Laughter)
79
220911
3984
03:44
But their answers are fascinating,
80
224919
2159
03:47
because they say things like,
81
227102
2435
03:49
"when my sports team loses,"
82
229561
1976
03:51
"people who chew too loudly."
83
231561
2397
03:53
That is surprisingly common, by the way.
84
233982
2428
03:56
"People who walk too slowly," that one's mine.
85
236434
3080
03:59
And of course, "roundabouts."
86
239974
1975
04:01
Roundabouts --
87
241973
1176
04:03
(Laughter)
88
243173
1991
04:05
I can tell you honestly, there is no rage like roundabout rage.
89
245188
3111
04:08
(Laughter)
90
248323
2389
04:11
Sometimes their answers aren't minor at all.
91
251219
2081
04:13
Sometimes they talk about racism and sexism and bullying
92
253324
3508
04:16
and environmental destruction -- big, global problems we all face.
93
256856
4321
04:21
But sometimes,
94
261839
1214
04:23
their answers are very specific, maybe even oddly specific.
95
263077
3270
04:26
"That wet line you get across your shirt
96
266815
2135
04:28
when you accidentally lean against the counter of a public bathroom."
97
268974
3348
04:32
(Laughter)
98
272346
1524
04:33
Super gross, right?
99
273894
1611
04:35
(Laughter)
100
275529
1508
04:37
Or "Flash drives: there's only two ways to plug them in,
101
277061
3427
04:40
so why does it always take me three tries?"
102
280512
2190
04:42
(Laughter)
103
282726
4483
04:47
Now whether it's minor or major, whether it's general or specific,
104
287233
3705
04:50
we can look at these examples
105
290962
1631
04:52
and we can tease out some common themes.
106
292617
2631
04:55
We get angry in situations that are unpleasant,
107
295272
2841
04:58
that feel unfair, where our goals are blocked,
108
298137
2666
05:00
that could have been avoided, and that leave us feeling powerless.
109
300827
3114
05:03
This is a recipe for anger.
110
303965
1800
05:06
But you can also tell
111
306100
1388
05:07
that anger is probably not the only thing we're feeling in these situations.
112
307512
3849
05:11
Anger doesn't happen in a vacuum.
113
311385
1629
05:13
We can feel angry at the same time that we're scared or sad,
114
313038
3436
05:16
or feeling a host of other emotions.
115
316498
2531
05:19
But here's the thing:
116
319053
1453
05:20
these provocations -- they aren't making us mad.
117
320530
3198
05:23
At least not on their own,
118
323752
1310
05:25
and we know that, because if they were,
119
325086
1863
05:26
we'd all get angry over the same things, and we don't.
120
326973
3080
05:30
The reasons I get angry are different than the reasons you get angry,
121
330077
3278
05:33
so there's got to be something else going on.
122
333379
2118
05:35
What is that something else?
123
335521
1493
05:37
Well, we know what we're doing and feeling at the moment of that provocation matters.
124
337038
5269
05:42
We call this the pre-anger state -- are you hungry, are you tired,
125
342331
3730
05:46
are you anxious about something else, are you running late for something?
126
346085
3460
05:49
When you're feeling those things,
127
349569
1849
05:51
those provocations feel that much worse.
128
351442
2428
05:54
But what matters most is not the provocation,
129
354752
2373
05:57
it's not the pre-anger state, it's this:
130
357149
2571
05:59
it's how we interpret that provocation,
131
359744
1873
06:01
it's how we make sense of it in our lives.
132
361641
2729
06:04
When something happens to us,
133
364394
1405
06:05
we first decide, is this good or bad?
134
365823
3080
06:08
Is it fair or unfair, is it blameworthy, is it punishable?
135
368927
3674
06:12
That's primary appraisal, it's when you evaluate the event itself.
136
372990
3818
06:16
We decide what it means in the context of our lives
137
376832
2413
06:19
and once we've done that, we decide how bad it is.
138
379269
2356
06:21
That's secondary appraisal.
139
381649
1729
06:23
We say, "Is this the worst thing that's ever happened,
140
383919
2545
06:26
or can I cope with this?
141
386488
1600
06:28
Now, to illustrate that, I want you to imagine you are driving somewhere.
142
388815
3507
06:33
And before I go any further, I should tell you,
143
393052
2310
06:35
if I were an evil genius
144
395386
1896
06:37
and I wanted to create a situation that was going to make you mad,
145
397306
3572
06:40
that situation would look a lot like driving.
146
400902
2438
06:43
(Laughter)
147
403364
995
06:44
It's true.
148
404383
1158
06:45
You are, by definition, on your way somewhere,
149
405565
2167
06:47
so everything that happens -- traffic, other drivers, road construction --
150
407756
4577
06:52
it feels like it's blocking your goals.
151
412357
2148
06:54
There are all these written and unwritten rules of the road,
152
414529
3191
06:57
and those rules are routinely violated right in front of you,
153
417744
3254
07:01
usually without consequence.
154
421022
1515
07:02
And who's violating those rules?
155
422561
1746
07:04
Anonymous others, people you will never see again,
156
424331
2595
07:06
making them a very easy target for your wrath.
157
426950
3135
07:10
(Laughter)
158
430109
1778
07:11
So you're driving somewhere, thus teed up to be angry,
159
431911
3696
07:15
and the person in front of you is driving well below the speed limit.
160
435631
3724
07:20
And it's frustrating
161
440118
1223
07:21
because you can't really see why they're driving so slow.
162
441365
2951
07:24
That's primary appraisal.
163
444340
1318
07:25
You've looked at this and you've said it's bad and it's blameworthy.
164
445682
3260
07:28
But maybe you also decide it's not that big a deal.
165
448966
2601
07:31
You're not in a hurry, doesn't matter.
166
451591
2293
07:33
That's secondary appraisal -- you don't get angry.
167
453908
2452
07:37
But now imagine you're on your way to a job interview.
168
457218
3856
07:41
What that person is doing, it hasn't changed, right?
169
461720
2484
07:44
So primary appraisal doesn't change; still bad, still blameworthy.
170
464228
3565
07:48
But your ability to cope with it sure does.
171
468315
2841
07:51
Because all of a sudden,
172
471180
1389
07:52
you're going to be late to that job interview.
173
472593
2167
07:54
All of a sudden,
174
474784
1151
07:55
you are not going to get your dream job,
175
475959
1910
07:57
the one that was going to give you piles and piles of money.
176
477893
2953
08:00
(Laughter)
177
480870
1001
08:01
Somebody else is going to get your dream job
178
481895
2333
08:04
and you're going to be broke.
179
484252
1650
08:05
You're going to be destitute.
180
485926
1429
08:07
Might as well stop now, turn around, move in with your parents.
181
487680
2953
08:10
(Laughter)
182
490657
2158
08:12
Why?
183
492839
1164
08:14
"Because of this person in front of me.
184
494027
1874
08:15
This is not a person, this is a monster."
185
495925
1993
08:17
(Laughter)
186
497942
1000
08:18
And this monster is here just to ruin your life.
187
498966
3514
08:22
(Laughter)
188
502504
1390
08:23
Now that thought process,
189
503918
1849
08:25
it's called catastrophizing, the one where we make the worst of things.
190
505791
4706
08:30
And it's one of the primary types of thoughts that we know
191
510521
2731
08:33
is associated with chronic anger.
192
513276
1665
08:34
But there's a couple of others.
193
514965
2072
08:37
Misattributing causation.
194
517061
1564
08:38
Angry people tend to put blame where it doesn't belong.
195
518649
2777
08:41
Not just on people,
196
521450
1882
08:43
but actually inanimate objects as well.
197
523356
1888
08:45
And if you think that sound ridiculous,
198
525268
1889
08:47
think about the last time you lost your car keys and you said,
199
527181
2929
08:50
"Where did those car keys go?"
200
530134
1451
08:51
Because you know they ran off on their own.
201
531609
2024
08:53
(Laughter)
202
533657
2910
08:56
They tend to overgeneralize, they use words like "always,"
203
536591
2865
08:59
"never," "every," "this always happens to me,"
204
539480
2666
09:02
"I never get what I want"
205
542170
1381
09:03
or "I hit every stoplight on the way here today."
206
543575
2690
09:06
Demandingness: they put their own needs ahead of the needs of others:
207
546879
3270
09:10
"I don't care why this person is driving so slow,
208
550173
2301
09:12
they need to speed up or move over so I can get to this job interview."
209
552498
3903
09:16
And finally, inflammatory labeling.
210
556425
2291
09:19
They call people fools, idiots, monsters,
211
559275
2872
09:22
or a whole bunch of things I've been told I'm not allowed to say
212
562171
3048
09:25
during this TED Talk.
213
565243
1167
09:26
(Laughter)
214
566434
1421
09:27
So for a long time,
215
567879
1270
09:29
psychologists have referred to these as cognitive distortions
216
569173
3456
09:32
or even irrational beliefs.
217
572653
1554
09:34
And yeah, sometimes they are irrational.
218
574231
2459
09:37
Maybe even most of the time.
219
577462
1722
09:39
But sometimes, these thoughts are totally rational.
220
579208
2682
09:42
There is unfairness in the world.
221
582649
1730
09:44
There are cruel, selfish people,
222
584403
1712
09:46
and it's not only OK to be angry when we're treated poorly,
223
586139
3858
09:50
it's right to be angry when we're treated poorly.
224
590021
3219
09:53
If there's one thing I want you to remember from my talk today, it's this:
225
593846
4001
09:57
your anger exists in you as an emotion
226
597871
3746
10:01
because it offered your ancestors, both human and nonhuman,
227
601641
4658
10:06
with an evolutionary advantage.
228
606323
2067
10:08
Just as your fear alerts you to danger,
229
608857
3085
10:11
your anger alerts you to injustice.
230
611966
2156
10:14
It's one of the ways your brain communicates to you
231
614146
2558
10:16
that you have had enough.
232
616728
1667
10:19
What's more, it energizes you to confront that injustice.
233
619022
3394
10:22
Think for a second about the last time you got mad.
234
622440
3206
10:25
Your heart rate increased.
235
625670
1738
10:27
Your breathing increased, you started to sweat.
236
627432
2301
10:30
That's your sympathetic nervous system,
237
630297
1864
10:32
otherwise known as your fight-or-flight system,
238
632185
3178
10:35
kicking in to offer you the energy you need to respond.
239
635387
3587
10:39
And that's just the stuff you noticed.
240
639758
1826
10:41
At the same time, your digestive system slowed down so you could conserve energy.
241
641608
4491
10:46
That's why your mouth went dry.
242
646123
1874
10:48
And your blood vessels dilated to get blood to your extremities.
243
648021
4044
10:52
That's why your face went red.
244
652089
1453
10:53
It's all part of this complex pattern of physiological experiences
245
653566
3539
10:57
that exist today
246
657129
1238
10:58
because they helped your ancestors
247
658391
2758
11:01
deal with cruel and unforgiving forces of nature.
248
661173
3333
11:04
And the problem is that the thing your ancestors did
249
664976
3231
11:08
to deal with their anger,
250
668231
1273
11:09
to physically fight,
251
669528
1328
11:10
they are no longer reasonable or appropriate.
252
670880
2157
11:13
You can't and you shouldn't swing a club every time you're provoked.
253
673061
3779
11:16
(Laughter)
254
676864
2840
11:19
But here's the good news.
255
679728
1738
11:21
You are capable of something
256
681490
1424
11:22
your nonhuman ancestors weren't capable of.
257
682938
2457
11:25
And that is the capacity to regulate your emotions.
258
685419
3358
11:29
Even when you want to lash out,
259
689174
1794
11:30
you can stop yourself and you can channel that anger
260
690992
2682
11:33
into something more productive.
261
693698
2067
11:36
So often when we talk about anger,
262
696119
1799
11:37
we talk about how to keep from getting angry.
263
697942
2667
11:40
We tell people to calm down or relax.
264
700633
2531
11:43
We even tell people to let it go.
265
703188
2278
11:45
And all of that assumes that anger is bad and that it's wrong to feel it.
266
705490
4849
11:50
But instead, I like to think of anger as a motivator.
267
710712
2821
11:53
The same way your thirst motivates you to get a drink of water,
268
713557
3127
11:56
the same way your hunger motivates you to get a bite to eat,
269
716708
2952
11:59
your anger can motivate you to respond to injustice.
270
719684
3499
12:03
Because we don't have to think too hard to find things we should be mad about.
271
723609
3936
12:08
When we go back to the beginning,
272
728085
1612
12:09
yeah, some of those things, they're silly and not worth getting angry over.
273
729721
3970
12:13
But racism, sexism, bullying, environmental destruction,
274
733715
3207
12:16
those things are real, those things are terrible,
275
736946
2302
12:19
and the only way to fix them is to get mad first
276
739272
3226
12:22
and then channel that anger into fighting back.
277
742522
3063
12:26
And you don't have to fight back with aggression or hostility or violence.
278
746053
4230
12:30
There are infinite ways that you can express your anger.
279
750307
3127
12:33
You can protest, you can write letters to the editor,
280
753458
2921
12:36
you can donate to and volunteer for causes,
281
756403
2543
12:38
you can create art, you can create literature,
282
758970
2769
12:41
you can create poetry and music,
283
761763
1961
12:43
you can create a community that cares for one another
284
763748
2499
12:46
and does not allow those atrocities to happen.
285
766271
2213
12:49
So the next time you feel yourself getting angry,
286
769331
2881
12:52
instead of trying to turn it off,
287
772236
2000
12:54
I hope you'll listen to what that anger is telling you.
288
774260
2645
12:56
And then I hope you'll channel it into something positive and productive.
289
776929
3531
13:00
Thank you.
290
780785
1151
13:01
(Applause)
291
781960
3500
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7