Speak Easy Doctors

The Confusing Thing About Anger

36 min · 8 de nov de 2025
portada del episodio The Confusing Thing About Anger

Descripción

In this Speak Easy Doctors episode, Dr. D and Dr. J extend their conversations around “love languages” by testing a pop-psych spinoff: the five “anger languages” which include righteousness, indignation, retribution, distraction, and justification. Using personal history and a communication lens, they question whether these are truly “anger” or broader reaction styles triggered by unmet needs. By the end, the hosts agree on a few anchors: anger is complex, often effective in the short term but costly over time; compassion can be equally effective but demands more skill and patience; and body awareness is a powerful early warning system. They also spar (playfully) over morality highlighting Dr. D’s “moral fluidity” vs. Dr. J’s rule-bound comfort—illustrating how definitions shape what we call “anger” in the first place. Stay for the real-talk takeaways: spot what’s under your “anger,” use DBT Wise Mind to pause before you hit send, and try compassion for long-game wins. Listen now.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y forma parte de la comunidad de Speak Easy Doctors!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

8 episodios

episode What Happened to Real Human Connection? artwork

What Happened to Real Human Connection?

In this reflective end-of-year episode of Speak Easy Doctors, Dr. D and Dr. J explore a question many of us are quietly carrying: what happened to real human connection? Framed around sociologist Robert Putnam’s influential concept of Bowling Alone, the conversation examines the steady decline of social capital—our shared sense of community, trust, and meaningful engagement with one another. This discussion is a thoughtful analysis of how factors such as risk and fears of opposing persepctives, media, and digital convenience have reshaped the way we relate. From the loss of “third spaces” like libraries, coffee shops, and community centers to the rise of attention and digital capital, Dr. D and Dr. J unpack how modern life has quietly trained us to connect less while scrolling more. Ultimately, this conversation is not about nostalgia for the past, but about possibility for the future. With warmth, humor, and humility, Dr. D and Dr. J argue that human connection is a muscle—one that can be rebuilt through intention, presence, and shared spaces that honor our need to belong. As they close out the year, they leave listeners with a gentle but powerful reminder: no digital substitute can replace the healing, regulating, and deeply human experience of sitting across from another person and being seen.

22 de dic de 202540 min
episode Micro-Expressions: The Secrets Your Face Keeps Leaking artwork

Micro-Expressions: The Secrets Your Face Keeps Leaking

In this episode of Speak Easy Doctors, Dr. D and Dr. J explore “leaked emotions” and micro-expressions—the tiny, often unconscious facial and bodily cues that reveal what we’re really feeling. Drawing on the work of Anna Wierzbicka, Paul Ekman, and Haggard & Isaacs, they discuss whether emotions and expressions are truly universal or shaped by culture, with a few detours into primatology, anthropology, and sociolinguistics. They unpack how sadness and fear often get hidden behind smiles or flat affect, how our bodies (jaw clenching, tight shoulders, fidgeting) “tell on us,” and how some modalities use these somatic signals in therapy. Ultimately, they invite listeners to see micro-expressions as a pathway to deeper connection—with ourselves and with others.

16 de nov de 202539 min
episode The Confusing Thing About Anger artwork

The Confusing Thing About Anger

In this Speak Easy Doctors episode, Dr. D and Dr. J extend their conversations around “love languages” by testing a pop-psych spinoff: the five “anger languages” which include righteousness, indignation, retribution, distraction, and justification. Using personal history and a communication lens, they question whether these are truly “anger” or broader reaction styles triggered by unmet needs. By the end, the hosts agree on a few anchors: anger is complex, often effective in the short term but costly over time; compassion can be equally effective but demands more skill and patience; and body awareness is a powerful early warning system. They also spar (playfully) over morality highlighting Dr. D’s “moral fluidity” vs. Dr. J’s rule-bound comfort—illustrating how definitions shape what we call “anger” in the first place. Stay for the real-talk takeaways: spot what’s under your “anger,” use DBT Wise Mind to pause before you hit send, and try compassion for long-game wins. Listen now.

8 de nov de 202536 min