About 15 years ago — around the time when I was learning about how my father’s narcissism had affected me — I started experiencing sudden and unexplained rage. I eventually figured out that this was the anger I had been repressing for all those years when being angry with him was dangerous to me.
But I’m still trying to learn to accept my own anger — and how to deal with other people’s anger without having to walk on eggshells.
This is the next in a series of videos dealing with issues that come up for me to think about ask I write a book about my childhood experience of growing up with a narcissistic father. You can visit that YouTube page to subscribe to future videos. (Liking and subscribing help me quite a bit in helping others to see the videos. Or can can watch this video below.

The best romantic relationships end up becoming mutual rescue
Life is a game of hide-and-seek; we’re lost if we no longer seek
By end of Pooh movie, I wanted to stay in the Hundred-Acre Wood
Economic and moral ignorance is at root of fast food worker walkout
Nature made me like my mother, but my father tried to erase that
Redemption of ’Bama’s Jalen Hurts illustrates what sports teach us
Target’s ID requirement for cold medicine is invasion of privacy
When it comes to ideas, should we prefer complexity or simplicity?
I’m waiting for life to begin, but I’m feeling lost and alone tonight