“For anger to be truly managed, it must be completely validated. Feelings of anger and the related urge to lash out—not the act of doing so, but the urge, which tends to be the most anxiety-provoking aspect of anger—are part of being human (Davanloo, 1995; Skorman, 2016). When angry feelings and urges are supported and differentiated from acting-out behaviors (remember, these are a function of anxiety and reactions to anger, not anger itself), anxiety tends to diminish, and unwanted behaviors are managed and curbed without demonizing and invalidating a basic human emotion.
In my
experience, when anger is internally embraced instead of resisted and
suppressed, the feeling doesn’t last very long. Instead, it quickly
turns into other feelings and states, such as sadness, remorse,
tenderness, and true forgiveness, among others. The resultant access to
the full range of human emotions, or the ability to experience both
positive and negative feeling states internally, is what releases the
self from a prison of repression and anxiety and allows its potential to
flower and expand into an embodied sense of what it means to be fully
human.”
https://www.madinamerica.com/…/anger-management-falls-short/
https://www.madinamerica.com/…/anger-management-falls-short/
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