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Digg it UP - What Causes Anger?
How To Start A Kitchen Restoration Business In Charlotte e parameters of a negotiating situation, we can narrow these factors down to four general events.What is the most interesting and tempting area in any house? The living room or the kid’s den or a revitalizing section filed with delicious aromas and tantalizing flavors. Yes, I am referring to the kitchen here. The first question that strikes one’s mind after returning from work to home is what is for dinner today. A tempting breakfast makes it much easier to get ready. It, in fact, is the most delicious reason to begin a new day. The very importance of this corner of the house makes a kitchen restoration business a promising venture.The Charlotte Touch to Your Business: The perfect start of a new venture in any city or state is one that is backed by adequate legal and governmental compliance. Improper planning at this end can lead to erroneous issues in the long run and, therefore, must be avoided. The related requirements in Charlotte are relatively easy and do not entail complicated administrative spirals.Among the key requireme 1. The person makes personal attacks against us. The other side attacks you along with the problem in the form of verbal abuse. 2. The person attacks our ideas. The other side chops down our ideas, opinions, and options. 3. The person threatens our needs. The person threatens to take away a basic need of ours if they do not get their way i.e. “I’ll make sure you’ll never work in this city again.” 4. We get frustrated. Our tolerance level for getting things done might be low or affected by any number of environmental factors in our lives. Factors That Lower Our Frustration Tolerance 1. Stress / Anxiety. When our stress-level increases, our tolerance for frustration decreases. This is why there are so many domestic disputes and divorces over financial problems. 2. Pain. Physical and emotiona Choosing an Answering Service: Part I Anger is a strong emotion of displeasure caused by some type of grievance that is either real or perceived to be real by a person. The cognitive behavior theory attributes anger to several factors such as past experiences, behavior learned from others, genetic predispositions, and a lack of problem-solving ability. To put it more simply, anger is caused by a combination of two factors: an irrational perception of reality (“It has to be done my way”) and a low frustration point (“It’s my way or no way”). Anger is an internal reaction that is perceived to have a external cause. Angry people almost always blame their reactions on some person or some event, but rarely do they realize that the reason they are angry is because of their irrational perception of the world. Angry people have a certain perception and expectation of the world that they live in and when that reality does not meet their expectation of it, then they become angry.What does it take to create an amazing call center? Many businesses have tried answering services and been turned off for reasons ranging from they don’t understand my business to pricing issues to rude operators. But, the reality is, small business owners need a break from their business. Finding an efficient live operator answering service to answer calls is a priceless commodity. Throughout this article, I will highlight a few necessities business owners should look into before committing to a service.First, and most important, test out the answering service before you commit to any contracts. Many services offer a free trial period…one word – “priceless”. The only way to know if a service will work for you is to test them out. Watch out for services that offer a trial then have long contracts you must sign. This is reminiscent of a “bait & switch tactic”. Services will answer your phones amazingly during the trial, get you to sign It is important to understand that not all anger is unhealthy. Anger is one of our most primitive defense mechanisms that protects and motivates us from being dominated or manipulated by others. It gives us the added strength, courage, and motivation needed to combat injustice done against us or to others that we love. However, if anger is left uncontrolled and free to take over the mind and body at any time, then anger becomes destructive. Why We Need to Control Anger Just like a person who is under the control of a street drug—-a person under the influence of anger cannot rationalize, comprehend, or make good decisions because anger distorts logical reasoning into blind emotion. You become unable to think clearly and your emotions take control of your actions. Physiologically speaking, anger enacts the fight or flight response in our brain, which increases our blood pressure and releases adrenaline into our bloodstream, thereby increasing our strength and pain threshold. Anger makes us think of only two things: (1) Defend, or (2) Attack. Neither of these options facilitates a good negotiation. Internal Sources of Anger Our internal sources of anger come from our irrational perceptions of reality. Psychologists have identified four types of thinking that contribute to anger. 1. Emotional reasoning. People who reason emotionally misinterpret normal events and things that other people say as being directly threatening to their needs and goals. People who use emotional reasoning tend to become irritated at something innocent that other people tell them because they perceive it as an attack on themselves. Emotional reasoning can lead to dysfunctional anger in the long run. 2. Low frustration tolerance. All of us at some point have experienced a time where our tolerance for frustration was low. Often stress-related anxiety lowers our tolerance for frustration and we begin to perceive normal things as threats to our well-being or threats to our ego. 3. Unreasonable expectations. When people make demands, they see things as how they should be and not as they really are. This lowers their frustration tolerance because people who have unreasonable expectations expect others to act a certain way, or for uncontrollable events to behave in a predictable manner. When these things do not go their way, then anger, frustration, and eventually depression set in. 4. People-rating. People-rating is an anger-causing type of thinking where the person applies a derogatory label on someone else. By rating someone as a “bitch” or a “bastard,” it dehumanizes them and makes it easier for them to become angry at the person. External Sources Of Anger There are a hundreds of internal and external events that can make us angry, but given the parameters of a negotiating situation, we can narrow these factors down to four general events. 1. The person makes personal attacks against us. The other side attacks you along with the problem in the form of verbal abuse. 2. The person attacks our ideas. The other side chops down our ideas, opinions, and options. 3. The person threatens our needs. The person threatens to take away a basic need of ours if they do not get their way i.e. “I’ll make sure you’ll never work in this city again.” 4. We get frustrated. Our tolerance level for getting things done might be low or affected by any number of environmental factors in our lives. Factors That Lower Our Frustration Tolerance 1. Stress / Anxiety. When our stress-level increases, our tolerance for frustration decreases. This is why there are so many domestic disputes and divorces over financial problems. 2. Pain. Physical and emotiona Building a Community for Your Website >Working online means to meet people and to deal with them.Especially when you have something to sell, you must setup a meeting place for them. You probably know that the best place on the Internet is your website.Once you've set up your site, it comes the funniest part. You have to build your community of website frequenters. I'm not referring to visitors, they are just like strolling in and out guests. When I speak about a community I'm thinking to those people coming back to your site from time to time.It's very important for your business to have people coming back. That means they are interested to visit your site because they need something from you. If you want to succeed in what you do, your highest goal is to keep this interest alive. Update your site frequently.Keep your site fresh with new content that will keep users coming back. Forget those free things people can see almost everywhere. I'm talking It is important to understand that not all anger is unhealthy. Anger is one of our most primitive defense mechanisms that protects and motivates us from being dominated or manipulated by others. It gives us the added strength, courage, and motivation needed to combat injustice done against us or to others that we love. However, if anger is left uncontrolled and free to take over the mind and body at any time, then anger becomes destructive. Why We Need to Control Anger Just like a person who is under the control of a street drug—-a person under the influence of anger cannot rationalize, comprehend, or make good decisions because anger distorts logical reasoning into blind emotion. You become unable to think clearly and your emotions take control of your actions. Physiologically speaking, anger enacts the fight or flight response in our brain, which increases our blood pressure and releases adrenaline into our bloodstream, thereby increasing our strength and pain threshold. Anger makes us think of only two things: (1) Defend, or (2) Attack. Neither of these options facilitates a good negotiation. Internal Sources of Anger Our internal sources of anger come from our irrational perceptions of reality. Psychologists have identified four types of thinking that contribute to anger. 1. Emotional reasoning. People who reason emotionally misinterpret normal events and things that other people say as being directly threatening to their needs and goals. People who use emotional reasoning tend to become irritated at something innocent that other people tell them because they perceive it as an attack on themselves. Emotional reasoning can lead to dysfunctional anger in the long run. 2. Low frustration tolerance. All of us at some point have experienced a time where our tolerance for frustration was low. Often stress-related anxiety lowers our tolerance for frustration and we begin to perceive normal things as threats to our well-being or threats to our ego. 3. Unreasonable expectations. When people make demands, they see things as how they should be and not as they really are. This lowers their frustration tolerance because people who have unreasonable expectations expect others to act a certain way, or for uncontrollable events to behave in a predictable manner. When these things do not go their way, then anger, frustration, and eventually depression set in. 4. People-rating. People-rating is an anger-causing type of thinking where the person applies a derogatory label on someone else. By rating someone as a “bitch” or a “bastard,” it dehumanizes them and makes it easier for them to become angry at the person. External Sources Of Anger There are a hundreds of internal and external events that can make us angry, but given the parameters of a negotiating situation, we can narrow these factors down to four general events. 1. The person makes personal attacks against us. The other side attacks you along with the problem in the form of verbal abuse. 2. The person attacks our ideas. The other side chops down our ideas, opinions, and options. 3. The person threatens our needs. The person threatens to take away a basic need of ours if they do not get their way i.e. “I’ll make sure you’ll never work in this city again.” 4. We get frustrated. Our tolerance level for getting things done might be low or affected by any number of environmental factors in our lives. Factors That Lower Our Frustration Tolerance 1. Stress / Anxiety. When our stress-level increases, our tolerance for frustration decreases. This is why there are so many domestic disputes and divorces over financial problems. 2. Pain. Physical and emotiona Niche Mini Sites - Earn Loads of Cash with Niche Mini Sites dstream, thereby increasing our strength and pain threshold. Anger makes us think of only two things: (1) Defend, or (2) Attack. Neither of these options facilitates a good negotiation.What is a niche mini-site you may ask? To answer that question I need to explain the marketing method, which is called ‘long-tail marketing’. Long tail marketing is a marketing technique used to target smaller, less competitive ‘niches’ or markets.For instance, instead of targeting ‘computers’ you would target ‘refurbished desktop computers’. The market is really unlimited, as you can target any of the millions of ‘niche’ topics out there.The way it works is you create small, 5-10 page websites on each ‘niche’. You would then market your websites with articles. Just write as many articles as possible and submit them to the top article directories, which are EzineArticles.com, ArticleCity.com and ArticleDashboard.com.These articles will have your ‘signature block’ at the bottom, which will contain a little information about yourself and your websites, as well as a link to your site. The more viewers your articles get, the more v Internal Sources of Anger Our internal sources of anger come from our irrational perceptions of reality. Psychologists have identified four types of thinking that contribute to anger. 1. Emotional reasoning. People who reason emotionally misinterpret normal events and things that other people say as being directly threatening to their needs and goals. People who use emotional reasoning tend to become irritated at something innocent that other people tell them because they perceive it as an attack on themselves. Emotional reasoning can lead to dysfunctional anger in the long run. 2. Low frustration tolerance. All of us at some point have experienced a time where our tolerance for frustration was low. Often stress-related anxiety lowers our tolerance for frustration and we begin to perceive normal things as threats to our well-being or threats to our ego. 3. Unreasonable expectations. When people make demands, they see things as how they should be and not as they really are. This lowers their frustration tolerance because people who have unreasonable expectations expect others to act a certain way, or for uncontrollable events to behave in a predictable manner. When these things do not go their way, then anger, frustration, and eventually depression set in. 4. People-rating. People-rating is an anger-causing type of thinking where the person applies a derogatory label on someone else. By rating someone as a “bitch” or a “bastard,” it dehumanizes them and makes it easier for them to become angry at the person. External Sources Of Anger There are a hundreds of internal and external events that can make us angry, but given the parameters of a negotiating situation, we can narrow these factors down to four general events. 1. The person makes personal attacks against us. The other side attacks you along with the problem in the form of verbal abuse. 2. The person attacks our ideas. The other side chops down our ideas, opinions, and options. 3. The person threatens our needs. The person threatens to take away a basic need of ours if they do not get their way i.e. “I’ll make sure you’ll never work in this city again.” 4. We get frustrated. Our tolerance level for getting things done might be low or affected by any number of environmental factors in our lives. Factors That Lower Our Frustration Tolerance 1. Stress / Anxiety. When our stress-level increases, our tolerance for frustration decreases. This is why there are so many domestic disputes and divorces over financial problems. 2. Pain. Physical and emotiona Jack and Jill Went Up the Hill - Well, Jill Did anxiety lowers our tolerance for frustration and we begin to perceive normal things as threats to our well-being or threats to our ego."Jack and Jill went up the hill to fetch a pail of water. Jack fell down and broke his crown and Jill came tumbling after." ~Mother Goose rhyme."Jack and Jill went up the hill to fetch a pail of water. Jack fell down and broke his crown, but Jill kept on climbing." ~A modern parable.This is the story of two entrepreneurs we'll call Jack and Jill. Jill went up the hill and built a successful business. Jack went up the hill, failed and fell down the hill. Read on to discover how Jill succeeded and Jack failed.Both Jack and Jill decided to go into business for themselves at the same time. Each worked for a company that sold and serviced technical products to certain professionals. Both have the same degree of skill and expertise at their job and loved their work. Both have a burning desire to succeed.Each of them went about building their business in their own way.VisionJack wasn't clear about his goals. 3. Unreasonable expectations. When people make demands, they see things as how they should be and not as they really are. This lowers their frustration tolerance because people who have unreasonable expectations expect others to act a certain way, or for uncontrollable events to behave in a predictable manner. When these things do not go their way, then anger, frustration, and eventually depression set in. 4. People-rating. People-rating is an anger-causing type of thinking where the person applies a derogatory label on someone else. By rating someone as a “bitch” or a “bastard,” it dehumanizes them and makes it easier for them to become angry at the person. External Sources Of Anger There are a hundreds of internal and external events that can make us angry, but given the parameters of a negotiating situation, we can narrow these factors down to four general events. 1. The person makes personal attacks against us. The other side attacks you along with the problem in the form of verbal abuse. 2. The person attacks our ideas. The other side chops down our ideas, opinions, and options. 3. The person threatens our needs. The person threatens to take away a basic need of ours if they do not get their way i.e. “I’ll make sure you’ll never work in this city again.” 4. We get frustrated. Our tolerance level for getting things done might be low or affected by any number of environmental factors in our lives. Factors That Lower Our Frustration Tolerance 1. Stress / Anxiety. When our stress-level increases, our tolerance for frustration decreases. This is why there are so many domestic disputes and divorces over financial problems. 2. Pain. Physical and emotiona Advanced Techniques For Unclogging Print Heads e parameters of a negotiating situation, we can narrow these factors down to four general events.WE will begin with the simple easiest methods and then get into some of the ways the professional printer tech gets them unclogged.Dealing with a clogged print head can be frustrating but this is no time to get into a hurry. Cleaning solvents can take many hours to do the job. And remember your trying to save the life of a printer. If all fails you printer may be ready for the printer graveyard. I'm talking about printers with the built in print heads here. It's probably best to explain the different types of printers now.There are two rough categories of printers one with the print head built into the printer. For example Epson some Xerox and Canon .The other are Hp and Lexmark, which have the print heat built into the cartridge.On most of the printers with built in print heads it is a major job to remove the print heads so all of our cleaning methods are with them left in the printer.Most of the clogs that occur while y 1. The person makes personal attacks against us. The other side attacks you along with the problem in the form of verbal abuse. 2. The person attacks our ideas. The other side chops down our ideas, opinions, and options. 3. The person threatens our needs. The person threatens to take away a basic need of ours if they do not get their way i.e. “I’ll make sure you’ll never work in this city again.” 4. We get frustrated. Our tolerance level for getting things done might be low or affected by any number of environmental factors in our lives. Factors That Lower Our Frustration Tolerance 1. Stress / Anxiety. When our stress-level increases, our tolerance for frustration decreases. This is why there are so many domestic disputes and divorces over financial problems. 2. Pain. Physical and emotional pain lowers our frustration tolerance. This is because we are so focused on taking care of our survival needs, that we do not have time for anything or anyone else. 3. Drugs / Alcohol. Drugs and alcohol affect how our brain processes information and can make a person more irritable or bring forward repressed emotions or memories that can trigger anger. 4. Recent irritations. Recent irritations can also be called “having a bad day.” It’s the little irritations that add up during the course of the day that lower our tolerance for frustration. Recent irritations can be: stepping in a puddle, spilling coffee on your shirt, being late for work, being stuck in a traffic jam, having a flat tire. Recognizing the Physiological Signs of Anger By recognizing the physiological signs of anger, we can attune ourselves to know when it is time to take measures to make sure that our level of anger does not get out of control. Here are some symptoms of anger: 1. Unconscious tensing of muscles, especially in the face and neck. 2. Teeth grinding 3. Breathing rate increases dramatically 4. Face turns red and veins start to become visible due to an increase in blood pressure 5. Face turns pale 6. Sweating 7. Feeling hot or cold 8. Shaking in the hands 9. Goosebumps 10. Heart rate increases 11. Adrenaline is released into your system creating a surge of power. Am I Right to be Angry? Damn right you are. You have your own perception and expectation of the world that you live in and when the reality that you live in fails to meet your expectations, then yes you have the right to be angry. Afterall, if everyone thought alike, then the world would be a pretty dull place to live. You are going to run into situations that you don’t enjoy. You are going to run into people who don’t respect your views and ideas. The feeling of anger is totally justified according to your beliefs and so don’t repress or deny those feelings. Having to right to feel angry does not mean that you have the right to lash out in anger by attacking the other person. You can’t change the views of other people to conform to your own because, like you, they have their own right to uphold their view of the world. The best thing you can do is recognize your anger and focus it on the problem instead of your counterpart. Key Points Being angry or frustrated is just like being under the influence of a drug. It prevents you from rationalizing and thinking logically. Anger is caused by a combination of an irrational perception of reality and a low frustration point. Anger is a natural response and you have every right to be angry, but you must learn to keep that anger in check during a negotiation because once you react in any negotiation, then you lose the agreement.
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