Dealing with Sudden Irritability

Dealing with Sudden Irritability

Have you ever had a sudden bought of irritability that seemingly comes from nowhere? Everything seems fine on the surface and then someone asks you to do something or interrupts you and then you suddenly feel this sense of intense irritability. This happens to everyone from time to time. Since I was trying to come up with at topic to think about today, I decided to investigate one of my incidents with irritability. As you probably guessed, there has been significant research on the causes and reasons behind this emotion.

First off, irritability is not a complex emotion. It is a base feeling that we have as part of our primal nerve center. The emotion itself is not complex, as it is usually temporary, but the causality and the inter relations with other emotions is what makes investigating it a complex challenge. During my review of some research, I stumbled on a few literature reviews on emotional intelligence research. As it turns out, some people believe that humans that have a higher emotional intelligence are able to self regulate feelings of irritability better than others.

What gave me something to consider is that these forms of regulation are not exclusive skills. These can be learned and practiced and therefore people can learn to reduce, or redirect the forces that cause them to have this emotion. Learning to self regulate is part of a core element of emotional intelligence and requires people to ponder how to recognize, control and then redirect emotional impulses such as this. A good part of this is learning to eliminate or distance oneself from known stressor, or at least know when their impact is exceeding your capacity to cope.

Diving into some of this research made me realize how bad I am at emotional intelligence. I think I am better now, but looking back at my formative years, I realize what a mess I was in dealing with and handling emotional states such as irritability. I did some reading this afternoon and identify some key areas that someone can practice in order to build self-regulation methods for handling emotions. I will provide a summary of three of them.

Gratitude - I am quite confident you have heard someone recommending that you keep a gratitude journal. Whenever I hear this, I tend to roll my eyes. However, there is something happening here with is a rather simple and rudimentary trick for teaching yourself how to self regulate. Often times people that are subject to the whims of various emotions find it difficult not to focus constantly on the things causing them frustration in their lives. They get too myopic and inwardly focused. When you stop and make a reflection on what you are grateful for, you are actually forcibly shifting emotional states. This ability to switch away from irritability is a strong coping mechanism.

Setting Boundaries - I complete failed at this most of my life. However, when you do not keep and maintain personal boundaries this can lead to sources of stress and irritability. When you allow people to encroach into your life and cause disruption, you get extremely frustrated and feel out of control. You actually can learn to say "no" more often and when you learn to establish those boundaries then you will significantly reduce irritability into your life. 

Understanding the Stress Response - Your body reacts to stress. There is an entire nervous system dedicated to this, as it was needed for our survival. However, if you allow this to be constantly firing off you will find few moments where you are calmed or relaxed. Someone who has this understanding will find good reason for doing simple things like breathing exercises, brief relaxing breaks and getting out of the chair and into nature for a brisk walk. These soothing skills are a way for us to combat the destructive stress in your life.

There are many more. Learning stress management techniques, having some self compassion, learning to not act on impulses, improving problem solving skills so that you can eliminate problems in your life that remain unresolved. However, if you do find yourself irritable for no clear reason then you might want to ask yourself how much energy you have spent toward learning regulation techniques. You can increase your emotional intelligence by putting some of these ideas into practice.

To wrap things up, the deeper I dove into the world of emotional regulation and irritability, the clearer it became that managing irritability isn’t about avoiding it altogether—because that’s impossible—but about developing practical ways to deal with it when it arises. It's fascinating to realize that irritability is often a surface-level emotion, which is rooted in more primal areas of our brain. Yet, the real challenge is understanding and mastering the underlying complexities that feed into it, such as stress, fatigue, or unmet expectations.

What surprised me most is the learnable nature of emotional regulation. We aren’t just stuck with how we feel; we can actually train our brains to respond differently to the same triggers. This goes beyond simply "calming down" when we're irritated—it involves proactively cultivating habits and techniques that reshape how we experience and respond to irritants in our daily lives. Practices like daily gratitude reflection and boundary setting, which I once dismissed, are actually powerful tools that force our brain to shift focus and regain control. These aren't quick fixes, but over time, they build resilience and emotional intelligence, making moments of sudden irritability less overwhelming.

For those of you who, like me, occasionally feel irritability sneaking up out of nowhere, it’s worth reflecting on whether you've truly invested in learning how to self-regulate. Perhaps it's time to start incorporating some of these practices. After all, emotional intelligence is not just a trait we're born with—it's a skill we can all cultivate, and with that, make irritability a much rarer visitor in our lives.

Anthony Falato

Marketing at Full Throttle Falato Leads

4mo

Guy, thanks for sharing! How are you doing?

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