In clinical work, doctors often encounter patients angry, angry, disrespectful words and other radical words and behavior. At this time, if the reasoned argument or teeth for teeth, may let things develop unmanageable, and if also calm, restrained attitude, it may quench the other side of the flames of anger, to play the effect of turning a war of words into a peace. Six years ago, one day at noon, an acute myocardial infarction patient from the emergency room into our ward. The patient only felt chest tightness without other obvious symptoms, but the results of electrocardiogram and myocardial enzyme examination fully meet the diagnostic criteria for acute myocardial infarction. I immediately organized the on-duty staff to actively rescue the patient and issued a medical order for drug thrombolysis. Unfortunately, just after the injection of drugs, the patient experienced ventricular fibrillation, cardiac arrest and loss of consciousness. The patient’s son became furious and wanted to fight against us. In the face of this situation, I did not anger, but calmly said: “Resuscitate the patient before!” Then I led us to defibrillate the patient and apply chest compressions. The patient soon returned to normal heartbeat, and slowly opened his eyes. Due to timely and correct rescue, the patient was successfully thrombolyzed, and was discharged from the hospital after 10 days of careful recuperation without any after-effects. For this, I was praised as “who can put out the fire that burns”. Another incident happened three years ago. At that time, I came up with the idea of writing an open letter to hospitalized patients. I wrote an open letter to hospitalized patients to the effect that heart patients often have rapid onset, rapid progression, and unpredictable prognosis. In order to save lives in a race against time, patients or their families are no longer allowed to sign an informed consent during resuscitation, and then many possible accidents and dangers are listed. I was quite pleased with myself, thinking that I could save for a rainy day and get rid of it once and for all. Who knew that when I took this letter and tried it for the first time on an elderly patient who had just been admitted to the hospital, the patient was extremely unfriendly and reproached me for being lazy and disrespectful to the patient. I was very angry at that time, but I forced myself to do “no anger without reason”. I listened to him quietly. I also thanked him and asked for his advice and suggestions many times during his hospitalization. When he was discharged from the hospital, a letter of commendation from the old man’s heart, in the form of a poem entitled “Spring Breeze Transforms Rain,” was posted in the outpatient lobby of our hospital.