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TL;DR: Keep a tin of dense putty in your cup holder. When someone cuts you off and your knuckles go white, squeeze the putty instead of laying on the horn for eleven seconds. It gives your hands the aggressive output they're craving without a dashcam incident.

Does putty actually help with road rage?

Your body wants to do something physical when you're angry — that's the fight response doing its job. Putty gives your hands a target that isn't the horn, the steering wheel, or a gesture you'll regret at the next red light. Squeezing something resistive drops your grip tension and gives the adrenaline somewhere to go.

Is it safe to use putty while driving?

One hand on the wheel, one hand on the putty. Same as holding a coffee, adjusting the AC, or changing the radio. Beast Putty doesn't crumble, doesn't stick to your hands, and doesn't require you to look at it. Squeeze and release. Eyes on the road.

Why putty instead of a stress ball?

A stress ball rolls under your seat the first time you drop it. Good luck finding it at 65 mph. Putty stays in your hand — it deforms, it doesn't bounce. It also gives you more resistance, which matters when your brain is screaming "HONK AGAIN" and you need something that actually absorbs force.

What about just doing deep breathing?

Sure, try telling yourself to breathe deeply when someone merges into your lane without signaling at 70 mph. Deep breathing works great in theory. In practice, your hands need something to do first. Squeeze the putty, then breathe. Physical first, mental second. That's how your nervous system actually works.

Where should I keep it in the car?

Cup holder or center console. Not the glove box — you'll never reach for it in time. Beast Putty's tin is small enough to fit in any cup holder and won't melt in a hot car like some knockoff slime would. It's there when you need it, invisible when you don't.


Beast Putty → — cheaper than a traffic ticket, quieter than the horn.