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Dr. Marty Nemko is among the nation's most sought-after experts on both career and education issues. Marty has been interviewed in hundreds of major media--from the New York Times to the Los Angeles Times to ABC.com.

He has been career coach to over 2,000 clients, and has a 97% client satisfaction rate.

His book, Cool Careers for Dummies is the #1 rated career guide in the Readers Choice poll and made the Wall Street Journal national business bestseller list.

His columns appear in Kiplinger's Personal Finance Magazine and for bankrate.com. They ran for three years on the front page of the classified section of the Sunday Los Angeles Times

Many of his writings have been published online on monster.com, careerbuilder.com, aol.com, and msn.com.

He was the one man in a one-man nationwide PBS-TV Pledge Drive Special, 8 Keys to a Better Worklife.

He is a frequent guest on CNN, ABC, and PBS. He is the regular career and education expert on CNN Local Edition.

He is in his 17th year as the regular career and education expert on the Ronn Owens Show, the #1 rated talk show in Northern California. He has been the primary source for dozens of articles, including in the New York Times and Washington Post.

He is in his 16th year as host of Work with Marty Nemko, a popular talk show on an NPR affiliate in San Francisco.

He holds a Ph.D. from UC Berkeley and subsequently taught there.

Visit Marty at www.martynemko.com

 

 

Editorial...

Excise Anger from Your Life

by
Marty Nemko © 2006

Anger destroys careers. It destroys relationships. You may think it lets off steam or shows how passionate you are, but getting angry almost invariably loses you more than you gain. Your bosses, co-workers, romantic partners, and children may kowtow in the short run, but they’ll increasingly try to avoid doing what you’d like them to--it’s only natural for people to try to foil someone who tries to intimidate them.  

An angry personality can also cost you your life. Anger creates the physiological fight-or-flight response, which takes a toll on the body.  

If you can stop being an angry person, you life will dramatically improve. The following plan has helped me and many of my formerly angry clients: 

bulletFully accept that anger hurts you more than it helps. A low-anger life is a happier life.
bulletRemember that nearly everyone dislikes angry people: they’re viewed as jerks, out-of-control, at minimum, not likeable. How do you feel about chronically angry people? Is that how you want to be perceived? 
bulletDo not, for a moment, believe you need to show anger to demonstrate passion. The most successful, efficacious people rarely get angry. For example, watch the government proceedings on C-SPAN. There, you’ll see America’s most influential people: senators, CEOs, top consultants. Even if they’re discussing something as crucial as weapons of mass destruction, the vast majority of them are calm, albeit focused. Focused, definitely yes; angry, no.
bulletIn most cases, anger-proneness is partly physiological. One client said, “I must have a huge adrenal gland. I go from zero to 60 in one second.” For such people, the most effective anger management technique is to structure your life so you’re less likely to be angry: As much as possible, work alone or with co-workers you respect. Avoid friends who often frustrate you.
bulletGo cold turkey. If you allow anger as an option, you’ll too often let yourself be angry, which almost always is a mistake. Calm concern yes; anger no. Ask for what you want, yes; get furious, no. Of course, especially in the beginning, you’ll occasionally slip up, but eventually, you will improve. I used to get angry almost daily. Now, it’s more like every month, and I only reach the yelling point perhaps twice a year.
bulletIf you wait until you’ve boiled over, you won’t be able to stop yourself. So be alert to your first signs of anger: your face getting flushed, your body tensing, whatever.  Every time you start to feel angry with someone, leave the room. Then take five deep breaths and ask yourself, “Is this worth getting angry over?” or “Will this matter a week from now? A year from now?” One of my clients would frequently yell at her second grader for not doing his homework. Worth discussing, yes. Yelling, no. In fact, the yelling only makes the child more resistant.
bulletBecome more accepting of people. No one is deliberately stupid or insensitive. Most people are doing the best they can; they’re simply flawed, just like you and me. So, substitute “He’s human,” for “What an idiot!”
bulletAccept that some things are beyond our control. Substitute, “Stuff happens” for ‘It’s not fair.”
bulletReplace your anger with gratitude. Sure, your boss may be insensitive. Sure your job, spouse, or children could be better. But focusing on that half- or even ¾-empty glass only ensures you’ll be an unhappy person. Be grateful for the good. At the risk of sounding like your mother, people really are starving in Africa.
bulletdon’t fume; improve. Even small steps help. For example, if your job is boring, learn a new skill or pick up a hobby. If your apartment is a pigsty, clean one corner of one room. If you and your spouse are always arguing, agree on how you’ll address one small problem.  

Excise anger from your life and you’ll be happier and more successful. I promise.

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The San Francisco Bay Guardian named Marty Nemko “The Bay Area’s Best Career Coach.” His columns and an archive of his National Public Radio San Francisco show plus excerpts from his book, Cool Careers for Dummies, which, in the Reader’s Choice Poll was rated the #1 most useful career guide, are free on www.martynemko.com.

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Copyright 2006 Marty Nemko, all rights reserved
 

 
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