[00:00:00] Welcome to the OWN IT Podcast with me, Nicole Hollar, where we're gonna to talk about stuff to help you get out of your way, take charge of your life, and, well, other stuff too.
Hey guys, thanks for joining me, Nicole Holler, with another episode of the OWN IT podcast. I wanted to talk to you a little bit today about how sadness sometimes looks like anger. And it looks like anger because people are angry. They're like angry, horrible people. They say nasty things. They are short tempered, they're shut down, they're closed off, and you're like, that's a horrible person.
My experience with people is that most people aren't horrible. And it's taken me a long time to get to that space because certainly as a younger person, you know, I grew up in a very loud home. There was a lot of like, um, criticism. And when I say home, I mean, like, globally, it could be like grandparents, aunts, uncles, my family, the whole thing.
Big Italian family, right? And I guess those were the things that were intended to propel you. But in addition to that, there weren't a lot of, I love you's or lap
[00:01:00] times, and that trickles down. So what happens over time with people, and I've told my family, thank you for being role models of what I don't want to be.
And you can feel whatever you want about that because there are role models around us all the time. Instead of having a victim mindset or taking things personally and being angry all the time or jealous or bitter or resentful or being short tempered or triggered. I decided at some point in my life when I was young that I needed to create an actual physical distance so that I could figure out who I really was and wanted to be.
I didn't want to be a sad disconnected person who didn't have confidence, who went into the world fear based with anxiety and anger. It's a very difficult place to come from and I know it can't feel good.
In fact, I was recently with family and I told one of my younger relatives, who was kind of closed and shut down, and she doesn't really want to talk, and she's very quick tempered. I said, you know, I
[00:02:00] know how hard it is to be in this situation, and I realize that you are a very sensitive person, and you haven't gotten the love, attention, and connection that you need. And I said, you know, angry, that feeling of anger is a very energetic feeling, and it takes a lot of energy all the time.
When you bite down, think about it, when you're angry, you're tense, and you bite down, and you're just shut all the time. It's a very tiresome experience to feel that way, to feel shut down, to feel disconnected.
When people are more happy and carefree and leisurely, they're like more fluid in the world.
They are more light you can feel their energy. Now the difference in circumstances if you're living in a parent's home, which I'm going to suspect that most people who are listening or watching this are no longer living as maybe teens or whatever in a parent's home, but you could be it's a little bit more difficult because you're in a confined space.
For for those of us who have had the opportunity to create space and distance,
[00:03:00] if you don't like those feelings It's so important to recognize all of the positive good qualities of yourself and to learn to depersonalize things.
That not everything is about us. That if I want my own time and space, it doesn't mean that I don't like you. Maybe I just need my own time and space. And learning to depersonalize things when I was younger was probably one of the biggest things that I had to overcome. And my point in sharing that is that we can always overcome that.
And there's two sides to the coin. Now, I've been in personal development and fitness and wellness for over 20 years. And it's been a long process. The point is, is that it's been a process. And that idea of, and you can see it, most anger comes from sad, meaning it's a fear base. It's
[00:04:00] a disconnect. You have to consider that fear and anger both come from the same place.
They are both from that fight or flight reflex. So anxieties, anger, anxiety attachment from people who didn't get the love, attention and connection they needed as a child. Often looks like bitterness or anger in people because they don't feel connected, grounded. They don't have that tribe within themselves.
Or feel like they have it in the world. And they're waiting for people to constantly fill that cup for them of feeling needed, loved, wanted, instead of knowing that we are a good quality people and it can become something that looks like anger and it pushes people away. So what it does is this place of wanting to be loved, to have attention, to have connection, that fear.
Of not having it that that program that's been running in the background for so many years
[00:05:00] tends to push people away because those types of people they lash out, they're bitter, they're resentful, they can't be appreciative of people. It doesn't mean they never show it. And that's why I said, I know that most people are fundamentally good people.
So if you're listening to this or watching this, And you happen to feel like one of those people is just short, and you're bitter, and you're angry all the time, and you know it because you just feel it. You just want to feel calm, cool, and collected. Then, if you haven't already done it, perhaps it's time to talk to somebody.
Perhaps it's time to work with somebody in NLP. Talk to somebody regarding any type of trauma therapy. By the way, trauma doesn't mean you are necessarily physically abused or something like that. It can be the lack of.
Sometimes trauma is that thing we didn't get as kids. And the reason I want to have this conversation about how sometimes I'm calling generally sad looks like anger is because I recognize that there
[00:06:00] are a lot of people who may feel that way. Because that fight and flight response is so powerful. If you are somebody who feels that way, you have this opportunity. You have an opportunity to feel good inside. To feel loved by yourself first, and then to know that you're loved. But in order receive that love. You can't push people away.
You can't be angry. You can't take a loved one, your, your boyfriend, your girlfriend, your parent, your kid, and tell them why they're horrible all the time as the way to think that that's motivating them to be what you need them to be. It doesn't really work that way. Likewise, if you're somebody on the other side and you can see in, like I can see in to the general picture of people and I've had a great opportunity into family, none of them are horrible people,
but they're missing something. And we can lean in a little bit sometimes to help bring somebody back, but it
[00:07:00] does take somebody who's open and receptive to it. So I would encourage those of you who are on the outside looking in going, uh, that's a pretty horrible person, to decide, are they really a bad person?
or are they demonstrating their emotional spectrum in a bad way? Is it maybe misaligned? Because sometimes if we can see into the bigger picture and not just be triggered by what we're hearing, seeing, feeling, or observing, we can recognize that there's something much bigger and deeper with somebody.
And perhaps you can actually be a person to pull them out of that a little bit to help guide them to maybe seek additional help or therapy that they need or somebody that they can lean into because sometimes one tether of connection is what somebody needs in a new environment in order to ignite something different. I'm going to leave that for today. If you guys want any more information about
[00:08:00] unconscious coaching, of course, you can always go to my website, NicoleHollar.Com. You can also find me on most social media sites at the handle @NicoleHollarCoaching. And of course, if you're loving the OWN IT podcast, go ahead and give it thumbs up on the episodes on YouTube, star it, like it, rate it, review it. I'd appreciate all of that. Thank you guys. Have a great day.