09 Mar 2026, 15:00

Why Am I Angry All the Time?

You’re not broken. You’re blocked.

Anger is protective energy. It protects you and your loved ones.

When someone crosses a boundary, or disrespects you anger shows up to protect you.

But sometimes you can’t be angry, and you have to stuff it. This probably happened a lot when you were young.

Anger is a natural response to a threat, but a bigger threat might require us to prevent any anger from surfacing. We stuff it down, and .. then what?

What happens when you stuff it down

When I was a kid, I got so angry at my dad that I grabbed an aluminum baseball bat and beat a spot on the pine tree in our backyard. Twenty or thirty hard hits, maybe two minutes, until my hands hurt from the reverberation.

The bark came off. Sap sealed the wound. That mark stayed visible for years.

The tree could handle it. But that anger? It didn’t go away just because I hit a tree.

Here’s what I’ve learned since then: when you resist or suppress an emotion, it doesn’t leave. It gets trapped. It intensifies. It waits.

And it keeps sending the same message, louder each time, until you finally listen — or it explodes.

So what do you actually do with it?

More recently, I smashed a nearly new box of tissues on my desk. Soft cardboard, easy to clean up. Something inside me shifted.

That’s not a joke. That’s a real thing that works.

The most important rule I’ve found: express anger in a way that causes no harm to any sentient being — human, animal, or otherwise.

Punch a pillow. Rip paper. Scream underwater. Even visualizing screaming has helped me process it.

But the real shift starts simpler than that.

“Breathe, brother.”

My friend texted me from a train in Tokyo. Someone had elbowed him hard in the ribs, blocked him, acted like an asshole. He wanted to knock the guy’s head off.

I was also on a train. I couldn’t take a call. Talking on Japanese trains is frowned upon.

I texted back: “Breathe, brother.”

I worried it might sound dismissive.

But later he told me those two words really helped. We’d done a lot of inner work together in our men’s group in Japan. When he read my message, he could hear my voice in his head. That memory helped him tune into a more grounded part of himself.

He remembered he had a choice.

The 90-second window

Here’s something most people don’t know: the physiological lifespan of an emotion in your body is about 90 seconds.

That’s research from neuroscientist Dr. Jill Bolte Taylor.

The emotion fires. Your brain releases chemicals — adrenaline, cortisol — your heart races, your chest tightens, your jaw locks.

If you actually feel it — without resisting, without adding stories about why you’re right or replaying what happened — the chemistry clears in about a minute and a half.

We keep emotions alive by fighting them or feeding them with thoughts.

Ninety seconds of actually feeling it? That’s often enough.

The anger isn’t the problem

Anger is a messenger. It showed up because something matters to you.

But if you’ve been stuffing it down for years, it’s not just anger anymore. There’s probably grief back there too. And fear. And loneliness.

Anger is just the one that’s allowed out. It’s the bodyguard standing in front of everything else you haven’t let yourself feel.


Want to see what’s underneath?

I built a quick self-check — 10 questions, takes two minutes. Nothing stored. No email required. Just for you.


Why I know this stuff

I spent decades saying “I’m fine.”

Meanwhile I was carrying anger I couldn’t name, grief I’d postponed since my Granddad died, and shame from things that happened when I was ten.

I didn’t know any of that at the time. I just knew something was off.

I established a men’s group in Tokyo just so I could talk about stuff. That turned into ManKind Project Japan — I’ve been facilitating men’s circles for over a decade now, in Tokyo and online.

I also wrote a book about all of this. It’s called I’M FINE! It’s the story of how I went from “everything’s fine” to actually being fine.

If any of this sounds familiar and you want to talk about it, I do free discovery calls.

07 Mar 2026, 21:00

Is Your Emotional Inbox Overflowing?

Someone asks how you’re doing.

It’s easy to say “I’m fine." In fact, in many social situations it’s practically required.

“I’m fine” doesn’t mean you’re “fine;” it probably just means, “now isn’t the right time to go into how I’m really feeling.”

But when is the right time? Who is the right person to talk to?

Here’s what I figured out.

Emotions are like messages that want to be acknowledged.

Every experience that you didn’t or couldn’t fully deal with at the time produces some emotional ju-ju that is waiting to be processed.

It could be anger you swallowed for fear of retribution, grief you postponed because you’re too busy with work, or feelings that come up when an argumentative asshole had a really good point but is such an ass, so ughhh!

The emotions which arise at these times don’t go away. Instead, they stack up while you ignore them. And they ought not be left waiting too long.

If you’re feeling a low-key background tension that’s always present, it may just be your emotional inbox overflowing.


10 questions. No email required. Just for you.

This isn’t a diagnosis. It’s a way to see how much crap has been piling up so you can decide when enough is enough.

For each statement, choose the answer that fits you best right now.

No one sees your answers. Nothing is stored.


Your results are yours.

If you want to talk about what came up, Book a free 30-minute call. No commitment, just an honest conversation.


Why I made this.

Years ago I established a men’s group in Tokyo just so I could talk about stuff.

I’d been playing “nice guy” for decades. Meanwhile my actual emotional state was a mess I couldn’t share with anyone.

Growing up, I got the idea that I shouldn’t express anger. I’m not sure where I learned it, but I know I picked it up along the way. And it wasn’t just anger. It was sadness, fear, grief, shame all in a messy soup in my heart. I kept it all locked down because that felt safer.

I established ManKind Project Japan and have been facilitating men’s circles for over a decade in Tokyo and online.

Here’s what I’ve seen hundreds of times: one honest conversation can settle a nervous system. Men walk into a circle carrying years of unprocessed stuff, and after a single conversation where they can be witnessed, we often say the same thing: “I feel so much better just talking about it."

I wrote a book called I’M FINE! because I learned the hard way that emotions don’t go away just because you ignore them.

This quiz is a small version of that. Share your answers with a trusted friend or someone else you can trust.
I don’t even care if you talk to me; I just want you to stop lying to yourself that you can handle it all alone.

17 Jan 2026, 12:35

I'M FINE! book launch and Emotional Awareness Workshop at The Pink Cow

Join us for yummy food and deep connection at The Pink Cow!

Date: Saturday, February 28, 2026
Time: 5:00 PM – 6:00 PM
Location: The Pink Cow, Akasaka
Venue: https://www.thepinkcow.com/
Address: 1-3-18 Akasaka, Minato-ku, Tokyo 107-0052
DG22 building 3rd floor

𝗜’𝗠 𝗙𝗜𝗡𝗘! Book Launch & Signing Party & Workshop @ The Pink Cow

Come join me at The Pink Cow - Restaurant, Art Bar & Funky Space on Saturday February 28th!

𝐏𝐀𝐑𝐓 𝐎𝐍𝐄: 𝐖𝐎𝐑𝐊𝐒𝐇𝐎𝐏

Do you enjoy deeper connection? Join at 5pm for a one‑hour workshop inspired by my book 𝗜’𝗠 𝗙𝗜𝗡𝗘!

Please RSVP here or on the LINE QR Code above to help us know how many to expect!

Outline:

  • placing our orders from their delicious California-Mexican menu
  • connecting with a simple check‑in circle,
  • enjoy a few engaging activities focused on emotional awareness
  • enjoy our yummy food orders from The Pink Cow!

I’ll also read a short section from my book 𝗜’𝗠 𝗙𝗜𝗡𝗘!… featuring my rarely‑heard Texan accent 🤠

No fixed price: donations welcome

Seats are limited for the workshop, so RSVP and See you there!

𝐏𝐀𝐑𝐓 𝐓𝐖𝐎: 𝐌𝐄𝐄𝐓 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐄𝐀𝐓

No RSVP needed! If can’t join this time for the workshop, or you’d prefer to just say hello, come between 6pm and 7pm for a casual meet and eat!

Celebrate the launch with a signed copy of 𝗜’𝗠 𝗙𝗜𝗡𝗘! (¥2000)

Come as you are and see you there!

The Pink Cow is located at:

1-3-18 Akasaka, Minato-ku, Tokyo 107-0052
DG22 building 3rd floor


Save the Date

Add this event to your calendar!

RSVP for the workshop on LINE

RSVP on LINE

Thank you https://www.instagram.com/narrwen_38 for the banner image!