
Anger is a normal human emotion that, despite what most people think, can bring about good as well as bad results. Although anger can arouse some pretty strong emotions, it also can energize you to solve problems, if you channel it in a positive manner.
Anger provides people with the energy to solve problems and resolve differences. If people learn to recognize lower levels of anger, such as frustration, annoyance, and irritation, these emotions can be used as tools to help people act assertively, by communicating feelings calmly and effectively. A constructive and assertive response to anger may:
Of course, anger can also lead to impulsive action, aggressive outbursts, inaction or passive aggression (the indirect expression of anger). These destructive forms of anger can generate everything from hurtful comments to health problems and outbursts of violence.
It can also be difficult to think clearly when angry. People communicate less effectively, sometimes taking actions that send the wrong signals and strain relationships. Worst of all, once an individual acts aggressively, others may be roused to hostility, increasing the likelihood of negative and unproductive confrontations.
At times, anger is met with a passive response, which results in another sort of communicative barrier. Someone who responds to anger passively may experience frustration, bitterness, resentment, lowered self-esteem and even helplessness. Any one of these feelings, or a combination of them, may build silently, surfacing later, in an unexpected or even destructive manner.
Just as anger sometimes provokes an indirect response, it sometimes develops as an indirect result of other problems. For example, anger may spring from tensions associated with the abuse of, or withdrawal from, controlled substances. Feelings of depression, anxiety, and grief are sometimes associated with problematic anger as well.
The rise of anger can be accompanied by physical changes:
As a result, unexpressed anger may be associated with high blood pressure, heart problems, and depression.
Anger management techniques are aimed at reducing the intensity of the feelings and physiological responses that anger causes. You can't avoid or change everyone and everything that may anger you. However, you can learn to control your reactions
Sometimes anger can overwhelm people before they even realize it. Learn to recognize the physical sensations and behaviors that precede anger, such as:
Pay attention to how you feel the next time you realize you're getting angry. You'll soon learn which physical symptoms you characteristically experience when your anger begins to build. These early warning signs will give you a few moments to react before your anger gets too hot to handle. With those few seconds and a simple technique or two, you can begin to reverse the physiological processes that anger calls up as it prepares your body for battle. Try one of the following tactics:
Now that you've given yourself the space to modify your anger, start trying to channel it into a positive tool for change.
Above all, be patient. It takes a while to make this work for you. You have to practice! So start small, and build your way up to dealing with larger issues.