7. You Can't Make Me Angry
Episode Summary
In this episode of Spiritual Sobriety, Chris McDuffie introduces Dr. Paul O’s framework for building spiritual sobriety, using the metaphor of a baseball diamond to map the four bases of recovery: physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual sobriety. Drawing on Buddhist teachings, the 12 Steps, and the premise that no external person or event can make us angry, Chris offers a practical and empowering vision of what it means to round the bases of sobriety. Not once, but again and again, one day at a time.
What You’ll Learn:
• Why our emotions, including anger, begin within us, not outside us
• Dr. Paul O’s four bases of spiritual sobriety: physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual
• How the Eight Worldly Preoccupations from Buddhism connect to our anger and suffering
• What it means to stay “at bat” in long-term recovery with progress, not perfection
• How physical, mental, and emotional healing all build toward a loving connection with yourself and others
In This Episode:
• Chris recaps the Buddha’s Four Noble Truths and the 12-Step journey covered so far
• An introduction to Dr. Paul O’s book You Can’t Make Me Angry and its central premise
• The baseball diamond exercise: labeling each base and identifying who is on the opposing team
• First base—physical sobriety: eating, sleeping, hydrating, exercising, and healing the body
• Second base—mental sobriety: confronting the “thinking disease” of addiction and trauma
• Third base—emotional sobriety: identifying, feeling, and responding from our core values
• Home base—spiritual sobriety: choosing love, forgiveness, and seeing the good in ourselves and others
• W.H. Auden’s poem As I Walked Out One Evening and loving our crooked neighbor with our crooked heart
Featured Practice:
Take 5–10 minutes today to work with the baseball diamond exercise. You will need a pen and paper.
1. Draw a baseball diamond on your paper and label the bases: First Base: Physical Sobriety, Second Base: Mental Sobriety, Third Base: Emotional Sobriety, Home Base: Spiritual Sobriety.
2. Ask yourself: who is on the opposing team trying to tag you out? Name the emotions, people, or patterns at each position. Anger at third base, fear as the opposing manager, and so on.
3. Now fill in your own team. Who is supporting your recovery? Who is your coach?
4. Sit with this question: “Am I committed to rounding the bases again and again, not just once?”
5. Notice what arises without judgment. Let it be information, not indictment.
Journal Prompt:
“Where am I on the baseball diamond today and what would it look like to take one honest step toward the next base?”
Key Quote:
“Spiritual sobriety is a fluid, dynamic dance and freedom from our suffering, from dukkha, from our attachments, and from grabbing and aversions.”
Chris McDuffie is a licensed psychotherapist, mindfulness teacher and sober coach in private practice. He is the CEO and lead therapist for Chris McDuffie Counseling, a leading concierge practice caring for mental and behavioral health needs. He lives in Carlsbad, California, and holds a Master of Social Work from Fordham University. He teaches recovery from addiction and co-occurring disorders through the spiritual practices of Buddhism and the 12 Steps.
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You don’t have to walk this path alone.