For a moment Thursday afternoon, I didn’t even feel like myself. I felt angry because I wanted to control a situation that I couldn’t control.
My anger turned to ugly words. I didn’t lash out very much. It was just a couple of sentences, but I was completely wrong. I had enough sense to realize — even as I was speaking — that I was handling a situation poorly. I walked out before I could say anything more and make things worse.
I went and sat down in a room by myself. I was flooded with a variety of feelings. I was angry, frustrated, hurt and — within a minute of so — ashamed.
It doesn’t matter what the problem was or what caused it. I’ve been thinking ever since then about a terrible pattern that I see in myself every now and then — not often, but more often than I like to admit.
When I am feeling especially needy in the emotional sense, I start to feel the need to be controlling. When I need something emotionally that I can’t get by myself, that turns to frustration and I express my frustration by trying to control others around me. Something about taking control can let me feel less needy — as though I’ve found a way to force my will into reality.

Could we solve tough problems if we didn’t know they’re difficult?
Film hurts when I hear, ‘I’ve seen what we can be like together’
When times turn too dark in my life, I’m grateful for furry antidepressant
You can change your story, but you first must throw away the old ones
Ignore the happy face it presents: Coercive state points a gun at you
Change sometimes happens slowly, not in the grand leap that we want
Reading through hundreds of my old articles has been unsettling
By end of Pooh movie, I wanted to stay in the Hundred-Acre Wood