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🛠️ Emotional Regulation

emotional-regulation

日々の感情を適切に調整し、怒りを

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📜 元の英語説明(参考)

Daily emotional regulation practices and anger management techniques. Use when someone overreacts to situations, struggles with emotional flooding, has anger episodes they regret, or wants to develop steadier emotional responses.

🇯🇵 日本人クリエイター向け解説

一言でいうと

日々の感情を適切に調整し、怒りを

※ jpskill.com 編集部が日本のビジネス現場向けに補足した解説です。Skill本体の挙動とは独立した参考情報です。

⚡ おすすめ: コマンド1行でインストール(60秒)

下記のコマンドをコピーしてターミナル(Mac/Linux)または PowerShell(Windows)に貼り付けてください。 ダウンロード → 解凍 → 配置まで全自動。

🍎 Mac / 🐧 Linux
mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cd ~/.claude/skills && curl -L -o emotional-regulation.zip https://jpskill.com/download/4768.zip && unzip -o emotional-regulation.zip && rm emotional-regulation.zip
🪟 Windows (PowerShell)
$d = "$env:USERPROFILE\.claude\skills"; ni -Force -ItemType Directory $d | Out-Null; iwr https://jpskill.com/download/4768.zip -OutFile "$d\emotional-regulation.zip"; Expand-Archive "$d\emotional-regulation.zip" -DestinationPath $d -Force; ri "$d\emotional-regulation.zip"

完了後、Claude Code を再起動 → 普通に「動画プロンプト作って」のように話しかけるだけで自動発動します。

💾 手動でダウンロードしたい(コマンドが難しい人向け)
  1. 1. 下の青いボタンを押して emotional-regulation.zip をダウンロード
  2. 2. ZIPファイルをダブルクリックで解凍 → emotional-regulation フォルダができる
  3. 3. そのフォルダを C:\Users\あなたの名前\.claude\skills\(Win)または ~/.claude/skills/(Mac)へ移動
  4. 4. Claude Code を再起動

⚠️ ダウンロード・利用は自己責任でお願いします。当サイトは内容・動作・安全性について責任を負いません。

🎯 このSkillでできること

下記の説明文を読むと、このSkillがあなたに何をしてくれるかが分かります。Claudeにこの分野の依頼をすると、自動で発動します。

📦 インストール方法 (3ステップ)

  1. 1. 上の「ダウンロード」ボタンを押して .skill ファイルを取得
  2. 2. ファイル名の拡張子を .skill から .zip に変えて展開(macは自動展開可)
  3. 3. 展開してできたフォルダを、ホームフォルダの .claude/skills/ に置く
    • · macOS / Linux: ~/.claude/skills/
    • · Windows: %USERPROFILE%\.claude\skills\

Claude Code を再起動すれば完了。「このSkillを使って…」と話しかけなくても、関連する依頼で自動的に呼び出されます。

詳しい使い方ガイドを見る →
最終更新
2026-05-17
取得日時
2026-05-18
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💬 こう話しかけるだけ — サンプルプロンプト

  • Emotional Regulation を使って、最小構成のサンプルコードを示して
  • Emotional Regulation の主な使い方と注意点を教えて
  • Emotional Regulation を既存プロジェクトに組み込む方法を教えて

これをClaude Code に貼るだけで、このSkillが自動発動します。

📖 Skill本文(日本語訳)

※ 原文(英語/中国語)を Gemini で日本語化したものです。Claude 自身は原文を読みます。誤訳がある場合は原文をご確認ください。

[スキル名] emotional-regulation

感情の調整と怒りの管理

感情はデータであり、命令ではありません。恐れは危険なものがあるかもしれないと教えてくれます。怒りは境界が侵害されたことを教えてくれます。悲しみは何か大切なものがあったことを教えてくれます。問題は感情を持つことではなく、感情に支配されることです。感情が押し寄せ、考える前に反応してしまうのは、感情的洪水であり、それは性格の欠陥ではなく、神経学的な出来事です。扁桃体が前頭前野が追いつくよりも速く発火します。良いニュースは、感情と反応の間のギャップは訓練可能だということです。このスキルは2つのことをカバーしています。時間をかけて感情的な回復力を築くための日々の実践と、怒りや圧倒感が支配的になり、次の90秒で何か(人間関係、仕事、壁)を破壊しないようにする必要がある場合の、その場での具体的なテクニックです。

このスキルは、blue-collar-mental-health、anxiety-emergency、boundaries-saying-noを参照し、拡張しています。

# ローカライズに関する注意 — 感情表現の規範と怒りの管理リソースは異なります。
- 感情表現に関する文化的規範:
  米国/オーストラリア:すべての性別で感情表現の受け入れが進んでいますが、
  多くのコミュニティや職場では男性に対する強いスティグマが依然として存在します。
  英国:歴史的に控えめ(「stiff upper lip」)ですが、変化しつつも、
  多くの文脈で感情の抑制が文化的に価値とされています。
  東アジア:公共の場での感情の抑制がより規範的です。
  親しい人との私的な感情表現がサポートの場となります。
  ラテンアメリカ/地中海:より表現豊かな文化です。感情の強さが自動的に病理化されることはありません。
  北欧諸国:中程度の表現規範です。強力なメンタルヘルスインフラがあります。
- 怒りの管理リソース:
  米国:APAの怒りの管理プログラム、裁判所命令のプログラム(該当する場合)、
  オンラインセラピーにはBetterHelp/Talkspace。
  英国:NHS IAPTプログラムは怒りのためのCBTを提供しています。Mind (mind.org.uk) にリソースがあります。
  オーストラリア:Beyond Blue。多くの地域保健センターが怒りの管理グループを提供しています。
  カナダ:州のメンタルヘルスサービス。カナダ精神保健協会。
- 性別に関する注意:
  男性は怒り以外のすべての感情を抑圧するように不均衡に教えられ、
  怒りが破壊的になると罰せられます。このパターンを道徳化せずに直接対処してください。
  女性の怒りは「過剰反応」や「感情的」としてしばしば却下されます。
  性別に関係なく、怒りを正当な情報として認めてください。
- 職場環境:
  肉体労働(職人、サービス業、労働)では、怒り + 道具/車両/機械 = 真の安全上の危険です。
  これを上から目線にならずに直接対処してください。

情報源と検証

  • UCLAの感情ラベリング研究 (Lieberman et al.) -- 感情に名前を付けることで扁桃体の活動が最大50%減少します。Psychological Science, 2007に掲載。https://www.scn.ucla.edu
  • ジル・ボルト・テイラー著「奇跡の脳」 -- 90秒ルール:体内の感情の化学的寿命。Viking, 2008。
  • ジェームズ・グロス、感情調整モデル -- 感情調整のプロセスモデル(状況選択、修正、注意、再評価、抑制)。スタンフォード精神生理学研究室。
  • ACT (Acceptance and Commitment Therapy) -- 感情調整に対する認知脱フュージョンと受容ベースのアプローチ。Hayes, Strosahl, & Wilson, "Acceptance and Commitment Therapy," Guilford Press, 2012。
  • ジェームズ・ペネベーカー、表現的記述研究 -- 感情的な経験について20分間書くことで、心理的および身体的健康が改善されます。テキサス大学オースティン校。
  • APAの怒りの管理ガイドライン -- 怒りの管理に対するエビデンスに基づいたアプローチ。https://www.apa.org/topics/anger
  • アンドリュー・ヒューバーマン、スタンフォード神経科学 -- 急性ストレス緩和のための生理的ため息の研究。Huberman Lab。

使用する場面

  • ユーザーが状況に過剰に反応し、後で後悔すると述べている場合
  • 感情的洪水に苦しんでいる場合 — 突然感情に圧倒される感覚
  • 人間関係、仕事のパフォーマンス、または財産を損なう怒りのエピソードがある場合
  • より一貫した感情的反応を開発したい場合
  • ロードレイジ、家族への激怒、職場での癇癪を述べている場合
  • 反応性のパターンを認識し、それを変えたい場合
  • 怒り + 機器 = 安全上のリスクとなる肉体労働に従事している場合
  • 感情が予測不可能または制御不能だと感じている場合
  • 感情的な回復力のための日々の実践を求めている場合

指示

ステップ1:90秒ルール — 実際に体内で何が起こるのか

エージェントの行動: ユーザーが自分が何に取り組んでいるのかを理解できるように、感情の神経化学を説明します。

90秒ルール — 感情の生物学

怒り、恐れ、悲しみ、パニックといった感情が襲ってきたとき、
体内で何が起こるかというと:

1. 扁桃体がトリガー(現実または認識された脅威)を検出します。
2. 思考を司る脳(前頭前野)が評価する前に発火します。
3. 体が神経化学物質で満たされます:アドレナリン、コルチゾール、ノルエピネフリン。
4. 身体的影響:心臓の鼓動が速くなる、顔が熱くなる、胸が締め付けられる、
   顎が食いしばられる、視野が狭くなる、手が震える、胃が締め付けられる。

重要な発見(ハーバード大学の神経解剖学者ジル・ボルト・テイラー):
トリガーからピーク、そして消散までの化学物質の急増全体は、
およそ90秒かかります。それだけです。

90秒後には、化学物質は体から洗い流されています。
もし90秒後も感情が完全に強いままであれば、それはあなたが状況を
繰り返し考えたり、頭の中で議論したり、物語を膨らませたりすることで、
それを再トリガーしているからです。

生理学的な部分は終わっています。あなたの思考がそれを生き続けているのです。

これが実際に意味すること:
最初の90秒をコントロールする必要はありません。できません — それは自動的です。
あなたがコントロールするのは、その後何が起こるかです。90秒の窓は、
反応から選択への移行期間です。このスキルにおけるすべてのテクニックは、
破壊的なことをせずにその90秒を乗り切り、その後、反対側から意図的な
決定を下すことに関するものです。

ステップ2:名前を付けて飼いならす — 感情ラベリング

エージェントの行動: 特定の指示とともに感情ラベリングのテクニックを教えます。

名前を付けて飼いならす

(原文がここで切り詰められています)
📜 原文 SKILL.md(Claudeが読む英語/中国語)を展開

Emotional Regulation & Anger Management

Emotions are data, not commands. Fear tells you something might be dangerous. Anger tells you a boundary was crossed. Sadness tells you something mattered. The problem isn't having emotions — it's being hijacked by them. When a feeling hits and you react before you can think, that's emotional flooding, and it's a neurological event, not a character flaw. Your amygdala fires faster than your prefrontal cortex can catch up. The good news: the gap between the feeling and the reaction is trainable. This skill covers two things: daily practices that build emotional resilience over time, and specific in-the-moment techniques for when anger or overwhelm takes the wheel and you need to not destroy something (a relationship, a job, a wall) in the next 90 seconds.

This skill references and extends: blue-collar-mental-health, anxiety-emergency, boundaries-saying-no.

# Localization note — emotional expression norms and anger management resources vary.
- Cultural norms around emotional expression:
  US/AU: Increasing acceptance of emotional expression for all genders, but
  still significant stigma for men in many communities and workplaces.
  UK: Historically reserved ("stiff upper lip"), changing but emotional
  restraint still culturally valued in many contexts.
  East Asia: Emotional restraint in public settings is more normative.
  Private emotional expression with close others is where support happens.
  Latin America/Mediterranean: More expressive cultures. Emotional intensity
  isn't automatically pathologized.
  Nordic countries: Moderate expression norms. Strong mental health infrastructure.
- Anger management resources:
  US: APA anger management programs, court-ordered programs (if applicable),
  BetterHelp/Talkspace for online therapy.
  UK: NHS IAPT programs offer CBT for anger. Mind (mind.org.uk) has resources.
  AU: Beyond Blue. Many community health centers offer anger management groups.
  CA: Provincial mental health services. Canadian Mental Health Association.
- Gender note:
  Men are disproportionately taught to suppress all emotions except anger,
  then punished when anger becomes destructive. Address this pattern directly
  without moralizing.
  Women's anger is often dismissed as "overreacting" or "being emotional."
  Validate anger as legitimate information regardless of gender.
- Workplace contexts:
  In physical jobs (trades, service, labor), anger + tools/vehicles/machinery
  = genuine safety hazard. Address this directly without condescension.

Sources & Verification

  • UCLA affect labeling research (Lieberman et al.) -- Naming emotions reduces amygdala activation by up to 50%. Published in Psychological Science, 2007. https://www.scn.ucla.edu
  • Jill Bolte Taylor, "My Stroke of Insight" -- The 90-second rule: the chemical lifespan of an emotion in the body. Viking, 2008.
  • James Gross, emotion regulation model -- The process model of emotion regulation (situation selection, modification, attention, reappraisal, suppression). Stanford Psychophysiology Lab.
  • ACT (Acceptance and Commitment Therapy) -- Cognitive defusion and acceptance-based approaches to emotional regulation. Hayes, Strosahl, & Wilson, "Acceptance and Commitment Therapy," Guilford Press, 2012.
  • James Pennebaker, expressive writing research -- Writing about emotional experiences for 20 minutes improves psychological and physical health. University of Texas at Austin.
  • APA anger management guidelines -- Evidence-based approaches to anger management. https://www.apa.org/topics/anger
  • Andrew Huberman, Stanford Neuroscience -- Physiological sigh research for acute stress relief. Huberman Lab.

When to Use

  • User describes overreacting to situations and regretting it afterward
  • Struggles with emotional flooding — feeling overwhelmed by emotions suddenly
  • Has anger episodes that damage relationships, work performance, or property
  • Wants to develop more consistent emotional responses
  • Describes road rage, blowing up at family, or losing temper at work
  • Recognizes a pattern of reactivity and wants to change it
  • Is in a physical job where anger + equipment = safety risk
  • Feels emotions are unpredictable or out of control
  • Wants daily practices for emotional resilience

Instructions

Step 1: The 90-Second Rule — What Actually Happens in Your Body

Agent action: Explain the neurochemistry of emotions so the user understands what they're working with.

THE 90-SECOND RULE — THE BIOLOGY OF AN EMOTION

When an emotion hits — rage, fear, grief, panic — here's what happens
in your body:

1. Your amygdala detects a trigger (real or perceived threat).
2. It fires BEFORE your thinking brain (prefrontal cortex) can evaluate.
3. Your body floods with neurochemicals: adrenaline, cortisol, norepinephrine.
4. Physical effects: racing heart, hot face, tight chest, clenched jaw,
   tunnel vision, shaking hands, stomach drop.

THE KEY FINDING (Jill Bolte Taylor, Harvard neuroanatomist):
The entire chemical surge — from trigger to peak to dissipation —
takes approximately 90 seconds. That's it.

After 90 seconds, the chemicals have flushed through your system.
If the emotion is still at full intensity after 90 seconds, it's
because you're RE-TRIGGERING it by replaying the situation, arguing
in your head, or feeding the story.

The physiology is done. Your thoughts are keeping it alive.

WHAT THIS MEANS PRACTICALLY:
You don't need to control the first 90 seconds. You can't — it's
automatic. What you control is what happens AFTER. The 90-second
window is your transition from reaction to choice. Every technique
in this skill is about surviving those 90 seconds without doing
something destructive, and then making a deliberate decision from
the other side.

Step 2: Name It to Tame It — Affect Labeling

Agent action: Teach the affect labeling technique with specific instructions.

NAME IT TO TAME IT — THE SIMPLEST TOOL WITH THE MOST EVIDENCE

UCLA RESEARCH (Lieberman et al., 2007):
When people put a word on what they're feeling, amygdala activation
drops by up to 50%. Not "I feel bad" — a specific word.

HOW TO DO IT:

1. PAUSE. When you feel a strong emotion, interrupt the autopilot
   for one second.

2. NAME THE EMOTION. Specifically. Not "I'm upset" but:
   - "I'm furious."
   - "I'm humiliated."
   - "I'm overwhelmed."
   - "I'm scared."
   - "I'm jealous."
   - "I'm grieving."

3. SAY IT (internally or out loud):
   "I am feeling [word]. This is a feeling. It's not permanent."

   OR the ACT version: "I'm having the thought that I'm worthless."
   (Adding "I'm having the thought that..." creates distance between
   you and the thought. You're observing it, not being it.)

WHY IT WORKS:
Naming an emotion activates your prefrontal cortex (thinking brain),
which automatically dampens the amygdala (reactive brain). You're
literally shifting processing from the part of your brain that panics
to the part that evaluates. It's neurological, not psychological — it
works even if you think it's stupid.

EMOTION VOCABULARY (because "fine" and "bad" aren't enough):
Angry: furious, irritated, resentful, bitter, frustrated, enraged
Sad: grieving, disappointed, lonely, hopeless, melancholy, empty
Scared: anxious, terrified, nervous, panicked, uneasy, dread
Shame: humiliated, embarrassed, worthless, exposed, inadequate
Overwhelmed: flooded, exhausted, paralyzed, scattered, crushed

The more precise the word, the more effective the technique.

Step 3: The Daily 2-Minute Check-In

Agent action: Provide the daily practice that builds emotional awareness over time.

THE 2-MINUTE DAILY CHECK-IN

This is the foundational habit. Two minutes. Every day. It builds the
awareness muscle that makes everything else in this skill work.

WHEN: Pick a time (morning coffee, lunch break, before bed). Same time
every day. Attach it to an existing habit (see habit-formation skill).

THE PRACTICE:

1. PAUSE (10 seconds)
   Stop what you're doing. Put down the phone.

2. BODY SCAN (30 seconds)
   Start at your head, move down. Where is there tension?
   - Jaw clenched? (anger, stress)
   - Shoulders up near ears? (anxiety, tension)
   - Stomach tight? (dread, fear)
   - Chest heavy? (sadness, grief)
   - Restless legs? (agitation, anxiety)
   Your body knows what you're feeling before your mind does.

3. NAME IT (30 seconds)
   "Right now I'm feeling [word]."
   If you can't name it: "Something is off and I don't know what yet."
   That counts.

4. LOCATE THE SOURCE (30 seconds)
   "This feeling is probably related to [situation/event/person]."
   Don't solve it. Just notice the connection.

5. RELEASE (20 seconds)
   One deep breath. Long exhale. Say: "Noted." Move on.

TOTAL TIME: 2 minutes.

WHY IT WORKS OVER TIME:
After 2-3 weeks of daily check-ins, you'll notice emotions EARLIER.
Instead of a feeling building for hours before exploding, you'll
catch it at "slightly irritated" instead of "screaming at someone
in the parking lot." Early detection = early intervention.

Step 4: Journaling That Actually Works

Agent action: Provide the Pennebaker method specifically, not generic "write in a journal."

THE PENNEBAKER METHOD — EXPRESSIVE WRITING

James Pennebaker (University of Texas) studied writing about emotional
experiences for decades. The research is consistent: 20 minutes of
structured writing about a difficult experience improves both mental
and physical health outcomes.

THE PROTOCOL:

WHAT TO WRITE:
Pick one thing that's bothering you. Write for 20 minutes about:
1. What happened (facts)
2. What you felt (emotions)
3. What you think now (perspective)

RULES:
- Don't edit. Don't worry about grammar. Nobody reads this.
- Write by hand if possible (slower = more processing). Typing works too.
- If you run out of things to say, repeat what you wrote. Keep the pen
  moving for 20 minutes.
- You can write about the same event multiple times on different days.
  Your perspective will shift.

WHAT NOT TO DO:
- Don't journal about everything every day. That becomes rumination.
- Don't reread what you wrote. The value is in the writing, not the
  rereading.
- Don't use it as a substitute for action. If the writing reveals
  that you need to have a conversation, have it. If it reveals you
  need to set a boundary, set it.

WHEN TO USE IT:
- After a fight or blowup (process what happened)
- When you can't stop thinking about something (get it out of your head)
- When you're carrying something you can't talk about yet
- When an old wound keeps resurfacing

THE OPTION TO DESTROY:
Write it. Then throw it away, shred it, or delete it. The act of
writing is what changes your brain, not the artifact.

Step 5: Physical Interventions for Acute Anger

Agent action: Provide specific techniques for the moment when anger is at full intensity.

WHEN ANGER IS IN THE DRIVER'S SEAT — PHYSICAL INTERVENTIONS

These work when thinking techniques don't, because when you're flooded,
your prefrontal cortex is offline. You can't think your way out.
You need to change your physiology first.

1. COLD WATER ON FACE (fastest reset)
   Splash cold water on your face, especially forehead and cheeks.
   This triggers the mammalian dive reflex: involuntary heart rate
   reduction. Works in 15-30 seconds. In a workplace: cold can or
   bottle pressed against face and wrists.

2. PHYSIOLOGICAL SIGH (Stanford research, Huberman Lab)
   Double inhale through nose (one big breath + one more sip of air).
   Long, slow exhale through mouth (twice as long as the inhale).
   Repeat 3 times. This is the fastest voluntary way to activate your
   parasympathetic nervous system (the "calm down" system).

3. WALK (bilateral movement)
   Walk away from the situation. Doesn't matter where. Walking
   (bilateral movement) helps the brain process stress. 2-5 minutes.
   Don't rehearse the argument while you walk. Just walk.

4. HEAVY EXHALE (vagal nerve activation)
   Exhale hard through your mouth like you're fogging a mirror. Hold
   the exhale for a beat. This stimulates the vagus nerve and drops
   heart rate. Do 5 of these.

5. GRIP AND RELEASE (progressive muscle tension)
   Make fists. Squeeze as hard as you can for 10 seconds. Release.
   Feel the contrast. Repeat with your whole body: tense everything,
   hold 10 seconds, release. This gives the "fight" energy somewhere
   to go without hitting anything.

ORDER OF OPERATIONS FOR ACUTE ANGER:
1. Stop talking. "I need a minute."
2. Leave the space if possible.
3. Cold water or physiological sigh (whichever is accessible).
4. Walk for 2-5 minutes.
5. After 5 minutes, assess: can you re-engage productively?
   If not, take more time. "I need 20 minutes."

Step 6: The STOP Technique

Agent action: Teach the STOP framework for the moment between trigger and reaction.

THE STOP TECHNIQUE — YOUR 90-SECOND BRIDGE

S — STOP
  Whatever you're about to do — don't. Don't send the text. Don't say
  the thing. Don't swing. Don't speed up. Just stop.

T — TAKE A BREATH
  One breath. Double inhale, long exhale (physiological sigh).
  This isn't meditation. It's buying yourself 10 seconds of prefrontal
  cortex activation.

O — OBSERVE
  What am I feeling? (Name it.)
  What triggered it? (The actual event, not my story about it.)
  What's happening in my body? (Heart rate, tension, heat.)
  What am I about to do? (And what will it cost?)

P — PROCEED WITH INTENTION
  Choose your response. Not your reaction — your response.
  "Is what I'm about to do going to make this better or worse?"
  If worse: walk away. The best decision when flooded is usually
  no decision.

SCRIPTS FOR THE "STOP" MOMENT:
When you need to leave a conversation:
"I need 20 minutes before I can talk about this."

When you're about to send an angry text:
Draft it. Don't send it. Re-read it in 20 minutes.

When you're angry at work:
"I need to step away for a minute." Walk to the bathroom. Cold water.
Come back.

When anger + driving:
Pull over. Seriously. Anger + 2 tons of metal at speed = the most
common place rage kills people. Pull over, do the physiological
sigh 5 times, then continue.

Step 7: When Anger Is Information vs. When It's Destructive

Agent action: Help the user distinguish useful anger from pattern-based reactivity.

ANGER AS DATA — WHEN TO LISTEN TO IT

Anger isn't the enemy. It's an alarm system. The question is whether
the alarm is responding to a real fire or a piece of burnt toast.

ANGER IS USEFUL INFORMATION WHEN:
- A genuine boundary was crossed (someone lied, cheated, disrespected
  you, or violated an agreement)
- An injustice occurred (you or someone else was treated unfairly)
- Your safety or dignity was threatened
- You need to take action to protect yourself or someone else

In these cases, anger is appropriate and the goal isn't to eliminate
it but to channel it — take action from a calm-angry place, not a
hot-angry place.

ANGER IS DESTRUCTIVE PATTERN WHEN:
- The reaction is wildly disproportionate to the trigger (screaming
  over a spilled cup of coffee)
- The same trigger keeps setting you off (every time your partner
  loads the dishwasher wrong, you blow up)
- You regret the reaction within minutes of having it
- Other people are afraid of your anger
- You damage things, relationships, or yourself when angry

SAME TRIGGER = UNRESOLVED ISSUE
If the same thing keeps making you angry, the anger isn't about
that thing. It's about something underneath. The dishwasher fight
is usually about feeling disrespected, unseen, or carrying an
unfair burden. The road rage is usually about feeling powerless
somewhere else in life.

Track the pattern:
Trigger -> What emotion? -> What's the deeper issue?
Three entries in this log and the pattern usually becomes obvious.

CONTEXT: PHYSICAL JOBS + ANGER
If your work involves tools, vehicles, heavy equipment, or other
people's bodies, anger on the job is a safety hazard, not just
an interpersonal problem. Adrenaline + a circular saw, a loaded
truck, or a scaffolding job = someone getting hurt. The STOP
technique isn't optional in this context. It's a safety protocol.

Step 8: Cognitive Defusion — Separating You From Your Thoughts

Agent action: Teach the ACT technique for creating distance from overwhelming thoughts.

COGNITIVE DEFUSION (from Acceptance and Commitment Therapy)

The problem isn't always the emotion. It's the story you tell about
the emotion.

Emotion: "I'm angry."
Story: "I'm angry because they always do this and they'll never
change and nothing will ever get better and I should just give up."

The emotion was one sentence. The story is a spiral.

COGNITIVE DEFUSION TECHNIQUES:

1. "I'M HAVING THE THOUGHT THAT..."
   Instead of: "I'm worthless."
   Say: "I'm having the thought that I'm worthless."
   This tiny reframe creates distance. You're observing the thought,
   not being consumed by it. It sounds weird. It works.

2. THE RADIO METAPHOR
   Your mind is a radio that's always playing. Some stations play
   helpful content. Some play garbage. You can't turn off the radio,
   but you can notice which station is on and choose not to turn
   up the volume.

3. THANK YOUR MIND
   When a destructive thought shows up: "Thanks for that, brain.
   I'm going to do something else now." Sounds absurd. Disrupts
   the thought loop effectively because it acknowledges the thought
   without fighting it.

4. THE PASSENGER METAPHOR
   You're driving the bus. Emotions are passengers. They can yell
   directions from the back seats. You don't have to turn the wheel.
   The angry passenger screams "run them off the road!" You
   acknowledge the passenger exists and keep driving where you
   actually want to go.

WHEN TO USE DEFUSION:
- Rumination loops (can't stop replaying an argument)
- Catastrophizing (one bad thing = everything is terrible)
- Self-attack (the inner critic that won't shut up)
- Pre-anger (the story you tell yourself before the anger peaks)

Step 9: Building Long-Term Emotional Resilience

Agent action: Provide the ongoing practices that reduce emotional reactivity over time.

THE LONG GAME — PRACTICES THAT REDUCE REACTIVITY

These aren't crisis tools. They're infrastructure. Like physical
fitness, emotional regulation improves with consistent practice,
not one-time interventions.

DAILY (non-negotiable):
- 2-minute check-in (Step 3)
- Name at least one emotion per day out loud or in writing

WEEKLY:
- One 20-minute Pennebaker writing session (Step 4) — especially
  after a difficult week
- Review: "What triggered me this week? What was the pattern?"
- One conversation where you express a feeling instead of
  acting it out. "I felt frustrated when..." instead of slamming
  a door.

MONTHLY:
- Assess your baseline: "Am I more reactive than a month ago, less,
  or about the same?"
- Identify one recurring trigger and develop a specific plan for it

SLEEP AND BASICS:
This sounds boring but it's foundational. Sleep deprivation
reduces prefrontal cortex function by up to 60%. That means your
"thinking brain" is running at less than half capacity. You'll
be more reactive, more emotional, and worse at regulating when
you're short on sleep. Same for chronic hunger, dehydration, and
sustained high stress.

If you're doing everything in this skill and still can't regulate,
check the basics first:
- Getting 7+ hours of sleep?
- Eating regularly?
- Drinking water?
- Any exercise at all?
Fix the basics before adding more techniques.

If This Fails

  • "I tried the 90-second thing and I was still angry": The chemicals clear in 90 seconds, but if you're replaying the event, you're re-triggering. After 90 seconds, deliberately redirect attention. Walk. Count. Cold water. Don't let the replay loop start.
  • "Naming emotions feels stupid and doesn't work": It works neurologically whether you believe in it or not. Give it 2 weeks of consistent practice. If it truly doesn't help after that, the issue may need professional support.
  • "I can't control my anger and it's scaring people": If your anger is causing fear in the people around you, this has crossed from self-help territory into professional help territory. Anger management therapy (CBT-based) has strong evidence. Many therapists specialize in this. EAP programs often cover it.
  • "I've always been like this — it's just who I am": Temperament is real. But emotional regulation is a skill, not a personality trait. People with naturally intense emotional responses can still learn to manage them. "This is just how I am" is often "I've never been taught another way."
  • "Nothing helps and I keep exploding": Persistent emotional dysregulation that doesn't respond to self-help may indicate an underlying condition (PTSD, ADHD, borderline personality disorder, bipolar disorder, or others). This isn't a judgment — it's treatable. Talk to a mental health professional.

Rules

  • Never dismiss someone's anger as "overreacting" or tell them to "just calm down." Both are counterproductive.
  • If someone describes anger that involves violence (hitting people, destroying property, threats), take it seriously. Provide anger management resources and encourage professional help.
  • Don't moralize about anger. It's an emotion, not a moral failing. The behavior that follows anger can be a problem. The anger itself is information.
  • If someone mentions anger in a context with tools, vehicles, or heavy equipment, address the safety component directly.
  • If anger is directed at self (self-harm), treat it as a crisis. Provide 988/Crisis Text Line resources immediately.

Tips

  • The physiological sigh (double inhale, long exhale) is the single most time-efficient intervention. Practice it when you're calm so it's automatic when you need it.
  • If you're a man who was taught that anger is the only acceptable emotion, know that the anger is often covering something else — hurt, fear, grief, loneliness. The anger is the bodyguard. The real feeling is behind it.
  • Physical exercise is the most underrated emotional regulation tool. It metabolizes stress hormones, improves sleep, and builds distress tolerance. You don't need a gym — a 20-minute walk counts.
  • Alcohol makes emotional regulation worse, not better. It feels like it helps in the moment because it numbs everything. But it also suppresses the prefrontal cortex, which is the exact brain region you need for regulation. Drinking when emotionally activated is pouring gasoline on the fire.
  • If your reaction to a situation seems bigger than the situation warrants, ask: "What does this remind me of?" Often, present triggers activate old wounds. The current situation isn't the whole story.

Agent State

emotional_regulation_session:
  primary_concern: null
  anger_severity: null
  emotional_awareness_level: null
  recurring_triggers: []
  physical_job_context: false
  safety_concern: false
  daily_practice_started: false
  professional_help_recommended: false
  resources_provided: []
  related_skills_referenced: []

Automation Triggers

triggers:
  - name: violence_detection
    condition: "user describes hitting people, destroying property, or making threats when angry"
    schedule: "immediate"
    action: "Acknowledge the honesty, provide anger management therapy resources, and recommend professional evaluation before continuing with self-help tools"
  - name: self_harm_detection
    condition: "user describes self-directed anger or self-harm"
    schedule: "immediate"
    action: "Provide crisis resources (988, Crisis Text Line) immediately before any other response"
  - name: workplace_safety_flag
    condition: "user describes anger episodes in a context involving tools, vehicles, or heavy equipment"
    schedule: "on_demand"
    action: "Address safety component directly using Step 6 STOP technique and Step 5 physical interventions"
  - name: pattern_recognition
    condition: "user describes the same trigger causing repeated anger episodes"
    schedule: "on_demand"
    action: "Jump to Step 7 pattern analysis and help identify the underlying issue beneath the surface trigger"