|
| Four
Proven Techniques for Managing Anger |
|
|
The first step towards managing anger in our personal relationships
appropriately is the identification of the mistaken attitudes
and convictions that predispose us to being excessively angry
in the first place!
Once these mistakes have been corrected, we will be less likely
to fly off the handle than we were in the past. |
|
|
|
|
The second step is the identification of those factors
from our childhood that prevents us from expressing our anger
as appropriately as we otherwise might. These factors include
fear, denial, ignorance and so on.
- These impediments to the effective and appropriate management
of our anger towards others can be removed so that our suppressed
anger will NOT compound itself inside of us as it has been
doing for years.
|
|
|
|
|
The third step is learning the appropriate modes of expressing
our "legitimate" anger at others so that we can
begin to cope more effectively with anger provoking situations
as they arise in our personal relationships. When we are anxious
or depressed in our relationships, we are often experiencing
the consequences of our suppressed anger. The problem is that
we have suppressed our anger so deeply that we succeeded in
concealing it from our own selves! All we are left with is
the residual evidence of it, our anxiety or our depression.
When we are depressed, very often we are also angry at our
self without realizing it.
- Learning to appropriately manage our anger at ourselves
is the antidote to much of alcoholism and drug abuse. But
the management of our anger does not end in learning these
new and more appropriate ways to express it. There remains
one last step.
|
|
|
|
|
The fourth step in the Anger Management process is to
bind up the wounds that may have been left by the potentially
devastating emotional impact of anger. "Anger wounds"
left in us against those who have wronged us. If we do not
complete this mopping up step, we will cling to the resentment
of having been done wrong and will carry the festering residue
of our anger and rage in our hearts forever.
- One of the most effective means of giving ourselves immediate
relief from anger in our personal relationships is to forgive
others.
|
Many
of us cannot forgive those who have trespassed against us.
Something below
the level of our conscious awareness prevents us from relieving
our residual anger by forgiving the other person and we then carry
a grudge in our hearts for thirty years! This unresolved anger poisons
our relationship with our friends and loved ones. It even spoils
our relationship with ourselves! We make our own lives mean and
miserable instead of happy and full. Very often the feeling is,
"Why should I forgive them? What they did was WRONG!"
But, is forgiveness for those who only do us right? Most people
have a hard time forgiving others simply because they have a wrong
understanding of what forgiveness is! When you forgive someone,
it does not mean that you condone or are legitimizing their behavior
toward you. To forgive them means that you refuse to carry painful
and debilitating grudges around with you for the rest of your life!
You are "refusing" to cling to the resentment of them
having done you wrong. You are giving yourself some immediate relief
from your OWN anger!
To
forgive, then, is an act that we do on our OWN behalf.
It has nothing
to do with "lifting" the other person's sin! You are not
doing it for their sake. You are doing it for yourself. This is
a choice you are making on your OWN terms in order to relieve your
OWN pent-up emotions. The book, Managing And Coping With Anger contains
an in-depth analysis of this four step process plus ten (10) carefully
designed exercises, called homework, to help you to completely master
the anger management process.
Select an area below
to learn more anger management techniques:
Copyright
©
1997-2005
Leonard Ingram, AngerMgmt.com. All rights reserved.
Site design by Internet
Presence Consulting, Inc. |