Ryan Martin: Why we get mad -- and why it's healthy
Dr. Ryan Martin is the chair of the psychology department at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
get a text from a friend, and it reads ...
I'm SO MAD right now!"
and you ask for details.
about what happened to them
or on their date last night.
to understand why they're so mad.
whether or not they should be so mad.
essentially what I get to do every day,
a good part of my professional life --
they have when they get mad,
when they get mad,
or breaking things,
in all caps on the internet.
their anger stories.
they need a therapist,
and it's something they can relate to.
since the first few months of life,
in our cries of protests,
you won't pick up the rattle, Dad,
as my mom can certainly attest to with me.
at some of the worst moments of our lives.
part of our grief.
in some of the best moments of our lives,
like weddings and vacations
frustrations --
when things go OK.
with people about their anger
that I've learned that many people,
in this room right now,
it interferes in your life,
maybe even the ways it's scary.
I see anger a little differently,
something really important
force in your life.
we actually have to back up
in the first place.
of an anger researcher
who wrote about this back in 1996
with problematic anger.
and I bet most of you,
when people drive this slow,"
the milk out again."
people just need to stop messing with me."
those types of provocations,
my friends and colleagues and even family,
that really get to you?
to point out one of the advantages
generating a comprehensive list
that really irritate my colleagues.
that one's mine.
there is no rage like roundabout rage.
aren't minor at all.
about racism and sexism and bullying
big, global problems we all face.
maybe even oddly specific.
against the counter of a public bathroom."
two ways to plug them in,
take me three tries?"
whether it's general or specific,
that are unpleasant,
where our goals are blocked,
and that leave us feeling powerless.
we're feeling in these situations.
that we're scared or sad,
they aren't making us mad.
over the same things, and we don't.
than the reasons you get angry,
something else going on.
at the moment of that provocation matters.
are you hungry, are you tired,
are you running late for something?
is not the provocation,
is it blameworthy, is it punishable?
it's when you evaluate the event itself.
in the context of our lives
we decide how bad it is.
that's ever happened,
to imagine you are driving somewhere.
I should tell you,
that was going to make you mad,
a lot like driving.
on your way somewhere,
other drivers, road construction --
and unwritten rules of the road,
right in front of you,
people you will never see again,
for your wrath.
thus teed up to be angry,
is driving well below the speed limit.
why they're driving so slow.
it's bad and it's blameworthy.
it's not that big a deal.
you don't get angry.
to a job interview.
it hasn't changed, right?
still bad, still blameworthy.
to cope with it sure does.
to that job interview.
piles and piles of money.
your dream job
move in with your parents.
just to ruin your life.
the one where we make the worst of things.
types of thoughts that we know
where it doesn't belong.
you lost your car keys and you said,
they ran off on their own.
they use words like "always,"
"this always happens to me,"
on the way here today."
ahead of the needs of others:
is driving so slow,
so I can get to this job interview."
I've been told I'm not allowed to say
as cognitive distortions
are totally rational.
when we're treated poorly,
when we're treated poorly.
to remember from my talk today, it's this:
both human and nonhuman,
communicates to you
to confront that injustice.
about the last time you got mad.
you started to sweat.
as your fight-or-flight system,
the energy you need to respond.
slowed down so you could conserve energy.
to get blood to your extremities.
of physiological experiences
forces of nature.
your ancestors did
or appropriate.
every time you're provoked.
weren't capable of.
to regulate your emotions.
and you can channel that anger
from getting angry.
and that it's wrong to feel it.
of anger as a motivator.
motivates you to get a drink of water,
motivates you to get a bite to eat,
to respond to injustice.
to find things we should be mad about.
and not worth getting angry over.
environmental destruction,
those things are terrible,
is to get mad first
into fighting back.
with aggression or hostility or violence.
that you can express your anger.
you can write letters to the editor,
and volunteer for causes,
you can create literature,
that cares for one another
those atrocities to happen.
you feel yourself getting angry,
to what that anger is telling you.
into something positive and productive.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Ryan Martin - PsychologistDr. Ryan Martin is the chair of the psychology department at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay.
Why you should listen
Dr. Ryan Martin teaches courses on mental illness and emotion, including a course on anger. He researches and writes on healthy and unhealthy expressions of anger. His website, All the Rage, covers recent research on anger and provides anger management tips on how to handle anger most effectively. He also hosts the popular psychology podcast, Psychology and Stuff.
Martin was trained as a counseling psychologist at the University of Southern Mississippi, where he first started studying anger after earning his undergraduate degree in psychology with a minor in criminal justice from the University of St. Thomas. He has worked with clients -- angry and otherwis -- in a variety of settings including community mental health centers, college counseling centers and a VA Hospital.
Martin is a professor of psychology and an associate dean for the College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay. His work has been featured in the New York Times, NPR's Invisibilia podcast, BBC Radio's Digital Human and elsewhere. When he's not thinking about feelings, he runs and spends time with his family.
Ryan Martin | Speaker | TED.com