
Accountability and Anger: Take Back Control of Your Life
How do you take accountability for something you feel you have no control over?
This is a question many people struggling with anger silently carry.
“The moment you take accountability for your anger, you gain power, safety, and control.
Everything you thought you had lost.”
I want to call you to action for a moment.
If you could sit across from your injured younger self, what would you say to them?
This is not an easy exercise - especially when the adult you is still sitting with pain. What often arises is protection, defensiveness, or justification - not empowerment.
Now imagine something else.
Imagine the adult you has the ability to change the story.
To bring healing where there was fear.
To create safety where there was chaos.
To offer love where there was absence.
Notice what happens in your body as you imagine this.
For many people, it feels deeply uncomfortable - even frightening.
The mind may argue: “This can never change.”
Or declare: “This is just who I am.”
The moment you identify yourself as “just like my dad” or “just like my grandfather,” you unknowingly accept the pain of previous generations as your own - and carry it forward.
And so I ask gently:
Do you want this pain to end with you, or continue into the future?
This is not about blame or guilt.
It is about opening the possibility of power, control, and emotional freedom.
What I have witnessed countless times in my work is this:
In moments of accountability, clarity arrives.
The body softens.
Freedom becomes possible.
And love begins to flow again.
Anger often becomes familiar - and familiarity can feel safer than peace.
If you let go of the anger, you may wonder who you will become.
You can learn this.
You can grow into safety.
You can become comfortable in a regulated body.
The moment you choose accountability, you step out of survival - and into leadership over your own life.




