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 McELROY ZOO: Meet Oliver, the furball who taught me to love cats
Shallow thinking and arrogance led to ruin of once-great society
After years of silence, it’s time to tell the truth about my father
Suicide’s what happens when you can’t find reasons to keep living
Nothing new here: Russell Brand pushing same old socialist idiocy
Keep trying: The squirrels are pedaling as hard as they can
Quit using the word ‘masculinity’
I’ll never really know my mother and I’m envious of those who do