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.

Why are killing, maiming people elsewhere called moral, ‘legal’?
Leopards might not change spots, but cowardly lions can gain courage
Marriage is a business decision, not just matter of romantic love
What’s at the root of objections to real freedom? Paternalism
Loss of everything you value can be a new beginning, not the end
500 years after Luther’s 95 theses, there’s still not much to celebrate
They won’t listen to arguments; they might listen to honest art
Love is best thing to happen to us
If people say I intimidate them, what am I really doing wrong?