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.

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Without real human connection, we’re just living in a simulation
Emotions such as fear, anger cause distraction, make focus difficult
My utopia’s different from your utopia — and that’s just fine
Is this what happens when you teach children there are no absolutes?
Unexpected meeting forces me to believe I might fall in love again
Why does anyone else care what Elon Musk does with his money?
Childhood programming trains us to wait for authority’s permission