Anger Fever: How to Express Your Anger without Getting Arrested! – Part 3
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 1,047 legacy views
By Ron Ross
Anger can be expressed in six common ways. Five of them do not work well. Those five are BLOW OUT, STRIKE OUT, FAKE OUT, SNUFF OUT, and PULL OUT. Read about them at RonRossToday.com
The best way to deal with anger is to learn how to effectively SPEAK OUT your anger without shouting, cursing, complaining, hiding, punching, seething, or running.
Using S-P-E-A-K as an acrostic, here are my suggestions for the appropriate expression of anger.
S - SUPERVISE. SUPERVISE YOURSELF FIRST.
In every tension-filled encounter, someone needs to be the grown-up. Let that person be you by supervising yourself first. Take control of your emotions, your body, and your tongue.
Anger does need to be expressed but in non-threatening ways that do not result in injury to yourself, the person with whom you are angry, or someone’s property. Therefore, it is up to you to suppress (different than repress) your anger until you have control of yourself and the situation.
You do this by acknowledging the feelings you have and declaring to yourself and others involved that the situation will be dealt with in an appropriate manner.
Supervise yourself first. Begin by calming yourself down: count backwards, talk to yourself, take three or four deep breaths, or remove yourself from the situation long enough to gain personal control. This tells yourself and others that your anger is OK, your self-esteem is strong, and you are an adult, but that you are able to express your anger appropriately.
P - PONDER. PONDER APPROPRIATE RESPONSES.
Anger always arises as the second event in any anger-producing incident. The spilled milk comes first, then the angry reaction. It’s the millisecond between the spilled milk and the reaction that holds the key to the appropriateness of the response. In that moment of time, you decide what you will say and how you will say it. And what you do at that time will determine whether you will make the situation better or worse.
Remember, nobody “makes” you angry. You choose the feelings you have and you determine how those feelings will be dealt with; they will either harm or heal, accept or reject, alleviate or aggravate.
So, don’t blame the other person for your nasty words and unseemly behavior. What you say and what you do and how you act are choices you make and you must accept the consequences of your actions and reactions, so the P in our acrostic stands for PONDER APPROPRIATE RESPONSES.
The E, A and K will be discussed next week. For all the columns please visit RonRossToday.com.
Article author
About the Author
Dr. Ron Ross (B.A., M.Div., D.Th.), author/speaker/publisher.For more from Dr. Ross please visit his site: http://www.RonRossToday.com
Further reading
Further Reading
Video
The Science of Motivation: What Actually Drives Us
A research-backed overview of intrinsic and extrinsic motivation and how to use both.
March 29, 2026
Video
Learn to Be a Winner — Even When Life Goes Sideways
Les Brown delivers an electrifying talk on building unshakeable motivation in the face of setbacks.
March 29, 2026
Article
Death into New Life
Death into New Life: When my mom, and best friend (Rachel) passed away in 2005, I was left dead with her. In the depth of pain, I never felt or saw anything good in her passing. I took comfort she was happier in heaven, than suffering the slow death of cancer eating away at her, but in the all about me show - I was l
Related piece
Article
Get Inspired with 10 Powerful Norman Vincent Peale Quotes
Dr. Norman Vincent Peale was a Christian pastor and one of the most influential thinkers and communicators of our time. People all around the world credit Dr. Peale and his teachings with bringing happiness and success to their lives. For years Dr. Peale shared his principles at the Marble Collegiate Church in New York
Related piece