Using your anger to make positive changes

by Lady Lee 32 Replies latest jw friends

  • Lady Lee
    Lady Lee

    Using your anger to make positive changes in your life

    I was so mad I just exploded in rage. How many times have you heard someone say, "That wasn't very mature of you," after you have lost your temper. A lot of people think that getting angry is a sign of loss of control, weakness. And sometimes it is. But that doesn’t mean that expressing anger is not healthy. How we express our anger can be helpful or harmful to us and others.

    Most people try to be good natured. Few people believe that acting out their unbridled anger is a good thing. It is natural for people to get angry.

    Finding healthy ways to express our anger can be difficult. But the truth is that we cannot deal with our anger without experiencing it and expressing it first. And we cannot deal with our anger until we acknowledge that it is there and have valid reasons for it.

    The book, A Course in Miracles, states that "all anger is an attempt to make someone feel guilty" really hits home with some people. However, some people think that the teachings about anger in the Course mean that anger is "bad." Some people believe that the best way to deal with anger is to put it out of your mind and just "think good thoughts." But that is not dealing with anger, because it stays somewhere deep inside of you until you do deal with it.

    Anger is, in fact, a heathy reaction to some situations. One person told me that anger is a blanket that covers our pain. It prevents us from feeling how much we have been hurt.

    Anger is a valuable emotional response - as valuable as happiness or grief. It may not be pleasant, but it is essential. How often has anger moved you to make needed changes in your life or helped you to confront someone or something?

    Anger may seem bad, but it can be an opening to peace and calm. When the body gets injured it feels pain. The pain is a warning that part of the body needs attention. In the same way, anger can draw attention to problems that need attention. If you don't find a healthy way to express the anger, it can turn inward, making you physically sick or cause you to lash out and do something you might regret later.

    We live in a society that does not understand anger, and certainly does not know how to process it. Think about that for a moment. Do we teach our children how to express their anger in a healthy way? Or do we teach them to stuff their anger rather to experience it find ways to use it to help them change things?

    We know that one of the best ways to relate to one another is through our feelings. We tend to find sadness a more acceptable feeling than anger. People in sorrow may not be able to explain themselves, but when someone is sad and crying, we know how they feel even if we don't know what it is about. We empathize and meet on that common ground of feeling. When I was a child, I learned that showing my emotions was bad especially my anger. Anger can be frightening. Letting someone express their anger can be very scary.

    Responsible ways to express anger

    Were you ever taught how to express your anger or when it might be appropriate and how? Taking responsibility for your anger allows you to control it instead of it controlling you. Taking responsibility for your anger begins with honesty with yourself. That means taking a moment to think, "I'm angry about..." The responsible expression of anger is healthy. Everyone has issues that can be triggered and there will always be people to trigger us. In fact, some people who, "make us angry" can provide us with opportunities to heal old issues. If you never find healthy ways to get angry, you might not get to the next step in healing recurring issues and removing blocks to your happiness.

    The secret to constructive anger lies in the ability to respond rather than react to anger-producing circumstances. Here are some tips for dealing responsibly with anger:

    1. Acknowledge that something has happened that makes you angry. There is no shame in anger.

    2. Take responsibility for it! You don't need to lash out on another person. He or she may have be the trigger, but is not the source of your anger.

    3. Express it! Remember you have a right to be angry, so get it out. The more you do, the less it builds into rage. Let it out. You may want to write about it first to help you identify exactly what you are angry about.

    4. Make a statement about your anger. Feelings of hurt, frustration, or fear may be underneath the anger. If you let it out, you'll get to its roots.

    4. Trust your feelings! The anger is there for a reason. If it overwhelms you, then ask for help. You could ask God to come into the situation to lead me through it to peace. Or ask a friend to listen while you talk about why you are angry and ask for feedback.

    5. Respect it! Anger is a powerful emotion that deserves your respect and attention. Some people do not make changes in their lives because they ignore their anger and what it is trying to tell them. When it comes to society, anger can motivate people to protest an injustice and bring about change. Anger is passionate and usually carries important messages. Listening to it is wise.

    6. Profit from it! There is a lot to be gained from paying attention to your angry feelings. You can actually learn to appreciate your anger. After you have expressed your anger clearly and honestly examine how you did and what you felt. Learn what your anger triggers are and that you are capable of dealing with anger constructively. Experience it first -- analyze and profit from it later!

    Anger is rooted in fear, revenge, pride -- all of these things. Anger is the blanket that hides what lies beneath. When you accept your anger rather than repressing it, you take back the power you lost when you suppressed that anger. When you deal responsibly with your anger you learn to control it, instead of it controlling you. You can now use this power to resolve long-standing issues and to promote your own healing.

    Because we live in a society that does not deal well withit, our anger may be our most misunderstood emotion. But it can actually be the key to greater self understanding. When handled responsibly, anger can actually be a friend. Conversely, when repressed or uncontrolled, anger can be damaging and destructive. So whenever you are angry, think of the experience as a good friend encouraging you to look at a deep truth.

  • bikerchic
    bikerchic

    Lady Lee what an excelent post!

    So whenever you are angry, think of the experience as a good friend encouraging you to look at a deep truth.

    I learned how to deal functionally with my anger in my 40's and have looked at it like the statement above ever since.

    Some of the other things I learned about dealing with my anger are:

    Get angry, but do not sin.

    Handle it in safe legal and constructive ways.

    Anger turned inward turns to depression.

    Pay attention to inability to handle anger in 3's and seek help. (I'm stuck, need help)

    Journaling is a great way to get the anger out.

    Yelling, hitting or throwing around a pillow helps too.

    Crying is good!

    Thanks Lee I'm going to print this out and save it for a refresher.

    Katie

  • Lady Lee
    Lady Lee

    Thank you Katie You make some really valid point Thank you for the inclusions

  • gumby
    gumby
    One person told me that anger is a blanket that covers our pain. It prevents us from feeling how much we have been hurt.

    Lady Lee,

    I believe this to be 100% true in my case. I am easy to get along with and basically a nice guy, but in the last year or so I have taken on a new person that I don't like and my friends are not familiar with. It's all anger and bitterness from rejection and it gives you a "piss on you attitude when you are criticized by others or dealt with unfairly. It's not fun.

    BTW.....you are a very sweet and caring person

    Gumby

  • Lady Lee
    Lady Lee
    in the last year or so I have taken on a new person that I don't like and my friends are not familiar with. It's all anger and bitterness from rejection and it gives you a "piss on you attitude when you are criticized by others or dealt with unfairly. It's not fun.

    Gumby this is exactly the kind of anger we need to recognize and deal with. It isn't fun - not for those around us and not for us either.

    So many people think sarcasm is OK - just a joke. But in my mind sarcasm is just disguised anger. I think there is usually an aspect of truth but we refuse to own the anger so it comes out as sarcasm.

    Owning the anger would mean we take a look at how we really feel and accept it. And then make healthy choices to deal with those feelings honestly and responsibly.

    I think too for many of us if we reject others first then they can't reject us - we think it will hurt less.

    I'm learning

  • kgfreeperson
    kgfreeperson

    My absolutely favorite self-help book is Harriet Lerner's "Dance of Anger." She and Lady Lee are talking about the same things.

  • DJ
    DJ

    Excellent, excellent post Lady. There is so much anger involved with the wt experience and the devastation it brings. Gumby, I relate to what you said. I think you are going to be ok.Hang in there and get the book. Thanks for the book title, kgfreeperson...it sounds like a must read for me. I have turned my anger at the wt into anger at God for letting it all happen in the first place and for allowing my family to bee still stuck in the cult. I see now that I was really angry at the wt but still a part of me was afraid to admit that completley because I still had some lingering doubts and trigger word issues. etc. Now I feel strong enough to be confident in my instincts that they are wrong and it has given me myself back again. I have no more fear of them. They really wreaked havoc in my life, even after I became a Christian, I still had questions and they went unanswered and that made me angry even more becaue it would send me back into that "what if they are right?" mode. It has taken years for me to begin to heal inside and replace their false teachings with true ones. Not an easy task by a long shot! I had to clear my head of all wt teachings and start from scratch, which was very hard. Once I could see that I was not wrong and they really had done a number on my head and dealt with that anger, only then could I se me again. I do not deal with anger gracefully...lol. It is major pain underneath and I let it well up until it explodes at the slightest thing. I have learned some new coping tools but I am in need of more. So, thanks again. Sorry for the long post. I feel like I am on the right road for the first time in my life. I am angry and it is ok. I believe that if my dying father and mom and siblings were able to get out..my anger would be gone. I just learned to pray for them without being afraid that they might be right after all. Sheeeeesh. what a head trip. love, dj

  • gumby
    gumby
    It has taken years for me to begin to heal inside and replace their false teachings with true ones. Not an easy task by a long shot!

    DJ,

    Thank you for trying to understand. There is one thing however you can't relate to.

    You became a Christian after exiting the dubs and at least at that point you felt you never left the truth.....you found it! How happy I was with a new hope and to see my anger turn to love and kindness to others. I was happy again. Then.......( and no.....this is not a anti-christian speech I'm about to give)

    ......I had some disturbing questions in which I began to study.( Fast forward ...as you know me by now and how I feel about this).

    Now it starts all over again. Since I personally feel I followed another lie.....the anger is worse than the first time around. Now I'm mad at god and religion to boot. It really sucks.

    There now....I feel better. And thank you who have helped me here.

    Gumby

  • nowisee
    nowisee

    hi lady lee,

    i enjoy all of your posts and almost always learn something. -- i also think it is funny that so often your posts are just before or just after mine. this post on anger was great -- it is something on which i am still working, as it often takes a while for me to realize it is even there. dealing with it is always challenging, but i do think i have gotten better. thanks for your great contributions.

    gumby -- i think of you so often, almost every time i come on this forum. i will tell you that many times i do not reply to your posts because you so often raise questions that i didn't even know existed! i don't ever want to answer in a knee-jerk fashion as i don't think that would accomplish anything. i want to know what i am talking about. i had never even heard of the "jesus seminar" until i came here in march. so i just want to acknowledge the issues you have raised. i think if my new found faith in Christ were to be destroyed i would be crushed and furious also. so i too am doing a lot of studying and reading -- am now in the middle of "the case for Christ" by lee strobel. have you read it? what was it that you found so convincing in your search? are you so very sure of your conclusions?? i often think you are really on a quest to reclaim your faith.

    best wishes to all, nowisee

  • beckyboop
    beckyboop

    Lady Lee,

    Thanks for posting that! It was very timely for me...;) I think our whole culture doesn't express anger very well, and with a cult background on top of that it makes it difficult to learn new habits. But the more we read and learn and try new ways we can let it out in healthy ways. Thanks again,

    KGFreeperson,

    I too love Harriet Lerner's "Dance of Anger", although your mentioning it made me realize that I haven't finished yet... Which is probably why I'm still having problems with this very thing. Thanks for the reminder.

    Love,

    Becky

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