How to Never Get Angry Or Bothered By Anyone
You'd pitch something, he'd go quiet, and then right when the conversation moved on, he'd say the exact same thing with slightly different words and everyone would nod at him. Every time it happened, I felt this slow, hot climb start somewhere around my chest and move up to my jaw.
I spent probably two years quietly furious at this person. Two years. I'd replay meetings in my head at 11pm. I'd draft mental arguments. I'd feel this low-grade irritation every time I saw his name in my inbox. And the kicker? He had no idea. He was completely unbothered, going about his life, taking credit for things, presumably sleeping fine.
That's the thing nobody tells you when someone gets under your skin: you're the one paying for it. They're not. You are.
That realization doesn't make the anger go away on its own. But it's a useful place to start.
Here's what's actually happening in your brain when someone pisses you off.
Your nervous system doesn't distinguish very well between a physical threat and a social one. When that driver cuts you off, or your mother-in-law makes that comment at dinner, or your coworker takes credit for your work, your amygdala the part of your brain that handles threat detection fires up. It's the same system that kept your ancestors alive when predators were real and immediate. A surge of cortisol and adrenaline follows. Your thinking narrows. You're no longer a nuanced, reasonable adult; you're a creature trying to neutralize a threat.
This is not a character flaw. It's just how the hardware works.
The problem is that most of the "threats" we encounter today aren't physical. They're symbolic. Someone dismisses your idea and it doesn't just feel rude it registers, somewhere deep and fast, as a challenge to your status, your competence, your worth. A family member presses a familiar button and it's not just annoying—it's activating a wound that was probably there long before they came along.
That's why the anger feels so disproportionate sometimes. You're not just annoyed at the driver. You're annoyed, and also your body briefly treated it like a survival event, and now there's chemistry in your bloodstream that needs somewhere to go.
Understanding that won't stop the reaction. But it will help you stop identifying with it so completely.
The question isn't really "how do I stop feeling angry?" Anger is useful information. It tells you that something crossed a line—real or perceived. The question is: how do you stop letting other people live rent-free in your head for days, weeks, sometimes years?
The answer has to start with something uncomfortable, which is that when someone bothers you, the thing you're reacting to isn't entirely about them. It's about you. Not in a blame-yourself way. In a this-is-useful-information way.
Think about the things that get under your skin most reliably. Not just the annoying ones the ones that linger. The ones that make you lie awake replaying a conversation. There's almost always a pattern, and it usually traces back to something you care about very deeply, or something you fear might be true about yourself.
If someone calls you lazy and it rolls off you, great. If someone calls you lazy and you're still thinking about it three days later, that's worth sitting with. Not because they were right. But because the charge had somewhere to land.
My former coworker got to me so deeply not just because what he did was unfair it was but because there was a part of me that worried I wasn't assertive enough, wasn't visible enough, wasn't making my mark clearly enough. He became a mirror for an anxiety I already had. His behavior was the kindling, but I was the dry wood.
This isn't a reason to excuse bad behavior or stop advocating for yourself. It's a reason to get curious instead of just reactive.
There's a concept in psychology called the "emotional regulation" process, and one of the most effective strategies in it is something called cognitive reappraisal—basically, changing the story you're telling yourself about what happened, before the emotional response fully locks in.
It sounds clinical. It isn't.
Here's a real example. Someone cuts you off in traffic. The automatic story is: that person is an aggressive idiot who doesn't respect anyone. The adrenaline follows that story. But what if before you've committed to the rage you briefly considered: maybe they just got a phone call that someone they love is in the hospital. Maybe they're in the middle of a situation that has nothing to do with you.
You don't have to believe the alternative story fully. You just have to introduce enough doubt to interrupt the certainty that fueled the anger. Because here's the thing about anger: it runs on narrative. The moment you're less certain the story is true, the charge starts to drain.
This is different from telling yourself to "calm down," which is both ineffective and slightly patronizing advice to give yourself. You're not suppressing the emotion. You're questioning the premise.
Now let's talk about the harder cases—the ones where cognitive reappraisal feels like trying to put out a bonfire with a damp cloth.
The family member who knows exactly which buttons to press, because they installed most of them. The coworker who has dismissed your ideas in meeting after meeting. The friend who somehow always makes you feel like you're doing life slightly wrong.
With these people, you've often got history, and history means the reaction is automatic and fast. By the time you'd even think to reframe anything, you're already eleven steps into the familiar loop.
What works here is less about in-the-moment tricks and more about doing work before the interaction.
There's a practice borrowed loosely from Stoic philosophy and reinforced by modern cognitive behavioral approaches—of mentally rehearsing difficult situations before they happen. Not in an anxious, dread-filled way. More like a quarterback studying tape. If you know Sunday dinner involves a certain family member who comments on your career choices, you don't have to show up cold. You can think, ahead of time: this will probably happen, and when it does, I don't have to defend myself. I can let it land and let it go.
This sounds passive. It isn't. Choosing not to engage is not the same as being steamrolled. It's recognizing that most of the time, defending yourself to people determined not to hear you is just burning your own energy in a fire they started.
Viktor Frankl, writing about surviving the Nazi concentration camps, said something that has stuck with me since the first time I read it—that between stimulus and response, there is a space. And in that space is your freedom. He was writing about incomprehensibly extreme circumstances, but the principle scales down. There is a moment, however brief, between what happens and what you do with it. The whole project of emotional regulation is about expanding that moment.
It gets longer with practice. That's genuinely true, and it's also genuinely hard.
Let's be honest about what "never getting bothered" actually means, because if you take the title too literally you'll either fail or become a robot.
You will still feel flashes of irritation. You'll still occasionally want to say something cutting back. You'll still lie awake once in a while replaying a conversation that felt unfair. That's being human. Trying to eradicate all of it is its own trap it just turns into suppression, which research consistently links to worse emotional outcomes down the road, not better ones.
The real goal is disproportionate reactions to nothing that lasts. It's the difference between feeling a flash of irritation and then moving on, versus carrying a grievance around like a stone in your shoe for a week.
The practice is not about becoming numb. It's about building a gap between feeling something and being consumed by it.
One more thing that nobody talks about enough: the people who bother us the least are usually the ones we feel secure around. And the reason isn't that those people treat us perfectly—it's that when we feel secure in ourselves, other people's behavior loses most of its power to destabilize us.
This is the unsexy truth underneath all the "don't let them get to you" advice. It's not a technique. It's not a breathing exercise. It's doing the ongoing work of building a relationship with yourself that isn't constantly up for renegotiation every time someone is careless or unkind or thoughtless.
That work looks different for everyone. For some people it's therapy. For others it's journaling, or meditation, or finally having an honest conversation with someone they've been avoiding, or just spending more time doing things they're good at. It's not glamorous. It doesn't come with a before-and-after photo. But it's the actual foundation.
When you know who you are and you're at some basic peace with it, the guy who takes credit for your ideas is just annoying. Not a referendum on your value. When you're not secretly afraid of the thing someone's implying, they lose their leverage over you completely.
I did eventually stop being bothered by that coworker. Not because he changed he didn't and not because I had some cathartic confrontation. I stopped because I started paying attention to why his behavior bothered me so much, and I found the anxiety underneath it, and I worked on that instead of working on resenting him.
And then, somewhere along the way, I saw him do his thing in a meeting and I just... watched it happen. Noted it. Thought, vaguely, there he goes again. And turned back to my notebook.
That's the whole destination, really. Not cold indifference. Not fake zen. Just a quiet, practiced ability to let someone else's behavior be their business, not yours.
It won't happen overnight. It didn't for me. But each time you catch the reaction before it runs away with you, each time you get a little curious instead of a little consumed that gap Frankl talked about gets a little wider.
Wider is enough.
Comments (1)
Thanks for breaking down Inertia 2.0 features so beautifully!