Editor's Note: "Borderlines," BAMHS' periodic newsletter, provides ideas and suggestions for healthy living, better family life and successful strategies for coping with life's challenges. Our newsletter is updated frequently! Check back often.
Border Area Mental Health Services
is the largest provider of behavioral health services in southwest New Mexico.
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Posted: September 3, 2008 Last Updated: September 3, 2008
Everyone has been angry. Anger is a completely normal human
emotion. But when anger gets out of control and causes destructive problems in
your life, it can make you feel as though you’re at the mercy of an
unpredictable and powerful influence. Taking control of your anger is an
important step to make as you mature.
Instinctively, the natural way to express anger is to respond
aggressively to a threatening situation. Anger is a natural, adaptive response
to threats and allows us to fight and defend ourselves when we are
attacked.A certain amount of anger is
necessary to our survival as a self-defense mechanism.
On the other hand, we can’t physically lash out at every
person, event and object that irritates or annoys us. Such behavior would
crumble the very foundations of our society.
There are three main approaches for how people deal with
anger: expressing, suppressing and calming.
Expressing your angry feelings in an assertive – not
aggressive – manner is the healthiest way to express anger. To do this, you
have to learn how to make clear what your needs are, and how to get them met
without hurting others. Being assertive isn’t a license to hurt others, it is a
way to discuss your anger and find solutions to the underlying threat that
sparked the initial emotion.
Suppressing anger and then converting it or redirecting it
can be done. This happens when you hold in your anger, stop and think about it,
and focus it on something positive. The aim is to inhibit or suppress your
anger and covert it into more positive constructive behavior. The danger in
this type of response is that if the anger isn’t allowed outward expression, it
can turn inward – onto you. Anger turned inward may cause hypertension, high
blood pressure, or depression.
Calming your anger means not just controlling your outward
behavior, but controlling your internal responses as well. Take steps to
control your heart rate, calm yourself down, and let the feelings subside.
Relaxation is essential to calming yourself when angry:
·Breathe deeply, from your diaphragm;
breathing from your chest won’t relax you. Picture your breath coming up from
your “gut.”
·Slowly repeat a calm word or phrase
such as “relax” or “take it easy”. Repeat it to yourself while breathing deeply.
·Use imagery; visualize a relaxing
experience, from either your memory or your imagination.
·Nonstrenuous, slow exercises can
relax your muscles and make you feel much calmer.
Also, try cognitive restructure. This means changing the way
you think. Angry people tend to curse, swear, or speak in highly colorful
terms. When you are angry, your thinking can get very exaggerated and dramatic.
This can allow your negative actions to seem justified as a response—like
abusing a partner, yelling at a child for an accident, or cursing the motorist
that cut you off in traffic. Try replacing the negative thoughts with more
rational ones. Remind yourself that getting angry is not going to fix anything,
and that it won’t make you feel better.
Sometimes anger and frustration are caused by very real and
inescapable problems in our lives. Many times anger can be a response to our
frustration dealing with these complex problems. The best attitude to take in
some situations is not to focus on a solution, but rather on how you handle and
face the problem. Problem solving can help you deal with problems that don’t
always have a cut and dry solution to them; these are problems that our
instinctual anger can’t readily solve. Make a plan and check your progress
along the way. Resolve to give it your best, but also not to punish yourself if
an answer doesn’t come right away. Many times anger can be a response to
frustration with complex problems.
If you feel that your anger is really out of control, if it
is having an impact on your relationships and the important parts of your life,
you might consider counseling to learn how to handle it better. A psychologist
or licensed mental health professional can work with you in developing a range
of techniques for changing your thinking and behavior.
When talking to a prospective therapist, tell him or her that
you are having problems with anger that you want to work on, and ask about
their approach to anger management. They can tailor a technique that fits your
personality best or aid you in sorting out the underlying problems or
frustrations that are causing the initial anger.
If anger negatively affects your life consider contacting
Border Area Mental Health Services.To
reach Border Area Mental Health Services in Grant and HidalgoCounties, call 388-4412; in CatronCounty,
call 533-6649 for referral; in LunaCounty, call
546-2174.For CRISIS, call 538-3488 or
outside SilverCity, call 1-800-426-0997.