http://www.youtube.com/watch?list=PL62EAF16B2ED4E14A&feature=player_detailpage&v=-C08MEELCJ8
NHS Choices video on anger management (subtitled)
I don't think of myself as an angry person, but sometimes I suddenly lose my temper over some little thing. Then, I say and do really hurtful things, and when I've calmed down again I hate myself.
Anger is a natural response to feeling attacked, injured or violated. It's part of being human; it's energy seeking expression. Our anger can be our friend. It helps us survive, giving us the strength to fight back or run away when attacked or faced with injustice. In itself, it's neither good nor bad, but it can be frightening.
Angry feelings can lead to destructive and violent behaviour, and so we tend to be frightened of anger. The way we are brought up, and our cultural background, will very much influence how we feel about expressing anger. You may have been punished for expressing it when you were small, or you may have witnessed your parents' or other adults' anger when it was out of control, destructive and terrifying. Or you may have been frightened by the strength of your own bad temper. All of this encourages you to suppress your anger.
When something makes you angry, you feel excitement in your body and emotions. Your glands are pumping your blood full of the hormone adrenalin, preparing for fight or flight. You are full of energy, alert, ready for action. Tension builds up, but is released when you express your anger. The release is good for you, helping to keep body and mind in balance and able to face life's challenges.
I was so angry after that weekend, visiting my parents, that I came home and ate a whole pot of jam!
As long as the build-up of tension is usually released in action or words, you should be able to cope with feeling frustrated occasionally! But if, as a rule, you have to bottle up your feelings, the energy has to go somewhere. It may turn inwards and cause you all sorts of problems. Suppressed anger can have very negative effects, physically and mentally.
No, I don't get angry when I remember the break-in. What's the point? It was just bad luck.
Anger might affect your:
These might include:
All of these will damage relationships with other people, and this is likely to lower your self-esteem further, and make you more depressed.
In our family, no-one ever shouts or throws things. Sometimes, I wish that they would. They just make snide comments, or sulk, or refuse to talk to each other for weeks.
It's much healthier to recognise when you are feeling angry and to express it directly in words, not in violent action. Expressing anger assertively in this way:
For example, Pat shouts angrily at her husband, Andrew, 'How could you treat me like that, you bastard?'. Andrew feels attacked for no good reason, and shouts back with more abuse. Pat may then feel helpless and victimised. Neither of them will feel happy with the exchange. Yet, if Pat were to say to Andrew, 'I'm angry with you because you haven't done any washing-up for weeks!', he will know why she is angry, and there will be a chance for them to talk about the washing-up, and work out a solution. Pat will feel better about herself, and the tension between them is less likely to build up to the point of violence. Andrew will have more information about what annoys Pat, and they will communicate better.
When I was little, my Dad used to shout and hit out sometimes, especially when he'd just come back from the pub. We'd be really scared. And then my Mum would go all tight-lipped and give him the deep-freeze treatment for days. But they never talked about whatever it was that he was angry about in the first place.
If you have spent a lifetime squashing your feelings, it will take time and effort to get into the habit of expressing anger in an assertive, but not aggressive way! But the following tips will help.
Learn about anger and assertiveness. Read about them and if possible, find an assertiveness training or other personal development group. (You could try your local authority adult education classes; details of these and other classes should be available at your local library.)
Look to your general health, especially diet and exercise. Lack of certain nutrients can make people feel irritable and weak. Exercise increases our self-esteem, as well as our fitness and muscle tone. Find pleasurable ways to let off steam involving vigorous physical activity, dancing, chopping wood, jogging, or whatever you feel like. This will prevent tension building up in your body in a destructive way. Nurture your self-esteem: treat yourself kindly and give yourself regular treats.
Get to know your own pattern of behaviour and history around anger. What was your family like when you were growing up? Who got angry, and what happened when they did? If no-one was openly angry, what happened to resentments and differences of opinion or of needs?
What unspoken messages did you receive about anger? Perhaps they were similar to these:
Only men get angry, but nice girls don't. They grow up to be martyrs and victims.
It's no good getting angry about anything, because they never take any notice of people like us, and it only gets you into trouble.People often lose their tempers and break things, but there's nothing we can do about it. It'll all blow over soon.Unless you shout and get angry, people won't listen to you or understand how important what you're saying is.
Think about these messages, and how they have affected your life. Do you still believe them? What do you think is possible for you now? Do you tend to bottle things up and get depressed, or do you tend to explode and be aggressive? How do you feel about your current pattern? Find someone to talk to about your feelings – an understanding friend, or a professional counsellor.
It's important to acknowledge angry feelings left over from the past, especially your childhood. Nothing can change what happened to you, but your attitude to it can change. Past losses and injustices, big or small, can rankle for years. Painful experiences may include being neglected by your parents, bitter rivalry with a brother or sister, the death of someone close, or growing up in exile.
You may think you have forgotten about them, that it's pointless to think about the past. But, if something suddenly happens to you in the present, and your response to it is totally over the top, it may become clear that these feelings are not so dead after all! While you remain unaware of them, they can cause unnecessary problems. But, if you can get to know them, you will have a chance of dealing more constructively with present situations.
For example, Sharon attends a parents' meeting at her children's new school. She finds herself increasingly irritated with the person chairing the parent-teacher association (PTA), who behaves in a very domineering way. Sharon comes away feeling depressed.
The school has requested volunteers to help organise a fundraising event. It is just the kind of thing she usually enjoys, but now Sharon feels that she wants nothing to do with the social side of the school. Then she realises why she didn't like the Chair of the meeting. He reminds her of a bullying teacher, with whom she had some very bad experiences at school. Memories come flooding back of how hurt, angry and powerless she felt at that time in her life.
Sharon talks about this with her friends, and they remind her that she is no longer powerless or friendless – that this is an opportunity to make a different kind of experience of school. Some of her friends have children at the same school, and share her concerns about the style and presence of the PTA Chair. Sharon can separate her old experience of the bullying teacher from her current challenge as a parent. She can have the possibility of a more constructive engagement with this dominant person. She feels free to join in the fundraising event, and plans with her friends and other parents how they might change the way the PTA is run.
Stop and think, if at all possible! There is a traditional saying, which is very sound, that goes: 'Hold your breath and count to ten before you say anything.'
It's a good idea to ask yourself, 'Am I so angry I can't think?', and, 'Am I wanting to lash out and hit someone?'. If the answer to either of these is yes, then walk away from the situation. Tell the other person that you are too angry to speak to them at this moment, if you can. Go away somewhere to calm down. If necessary, let out the desire to lash out by hitting a cushion, breaking crockery if you have to, shouting, screaming or making some kind of angry noise where it will not alarm anyone.
'Why am I so angry?'. Finding the answer to this is important for the next step. Are you angry because of something that is happening now, that threatens you, your life, your loved ones, your work, someone or something that you value? In other words, is your anger justified and in proportion? Or is it that some of the anger that you feel is not really due to the person and situation that you are facing now, but to some unfinished business from the past?
If your anger turns out to be more to do with the past than the present, then think about how to address that before, or as well as, dealing with the current situation.
The way to find out about this is by talking it over with another person, preferably someone who is not involved, personally. Once you are clear that the anger is about the here-and-now, prepare to tell the other person that you are angry!
Following these tips won't mean you never get angry, but it will help you feel better about yourself.
Sometimes, people are angered by political issues; by sleaze in public life, by the treatment of people in mental hospitals, or by the invasion of one country by another, for instance.
Anger can be an important fuel to campaigns for social justice. But, as with personal issues, it's important to think about what you are doing and to use your anger assertively. In a healthy society, participation in public campaigns for justice in a non-violent and responsible way would be seen as evidence of maturity and good citizenship.
There's a well-known prayer that asks, 'Lord, give us the courage to change what needs to be changed, the strength to bear what cannot be changed, and the wisdom to know the difference'. Being in touch with your own anger is a potent source of that knowledge and wisdom.
Alcoholics Anonymous
PO Box 1, Stonebow House, Stonebow, York YO1 7NJ
helpline: 0845 769 7555
web: www.alcoholics-anonymous.org.uk
National network of local Alcoholics Anonymous groups. Look for 'Alcoholics Anonymous' in any telephone directory
Andrea Adams Trust
tel. 01273 704 900
web: www.andreaadamstrust.org
UK charity dedicated to tackling workplace bullying
British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive
Psychotherapies (BABCP)
tel. 0161 797 4484
web: www.babcp.com
Full directory of psychotherapists available online
British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy (BACP)
tel. 01455 883 316
web: www.bacp.co.uk
See website or phone to find local practitioners
BAAM (British Association of Anger Management)
tel. 0845 1300 286
web: www.angermanage.co.uk
Support and training for men, women and children needing anger management and those who have to deal with someone else's anger
Depression Alliance
tel. 0845 123 2320
web: www.depressionalliance.org
Information and support for anyone affected by depression
Everyman Project
helpline: 020 7263 8884
web: www.everymanproject.co.uk
Counselling for men who want to stop their violence
Supportline
PO Box 1596, Ilford, Essex IG1 3FW
helpline: 01708 765 200
web: www.supportline.org.uk
Helpline for problems, including child abuse, bullying,
depression, anxiety, domestic violence and sexual assault
Women's Aid
helpline: 0808 2000 247
email: helpline@womensaid.org.uk
web: www.womensaid.org.uk
National domestic violence charity
The anger control workbook: simple, innovative techniques for
managing anger and developing healthier ways of relating
M. McKay, P. Rogers (New Harbinger Press 2000)
The assertiveness workbook: how to express your ideas and
stand up for yourself at work and in relationships R. J. Paterson
(New Harbinger Press 2000)
Confidence works: learn to be your own life coach G. McMahon (Sheldon Press 2001)
Heal the hurt: how to forgive and move on A. Macaskill (Sheldon Press 2002)
How to assert yourself (Mind 2006)
How to look after yourself (Mind 2006)
Making sense of counselling (Mind 2008)
Managing anger: simple steps to dealing with frustration and threat G. Lindenfield (Thorsons 2000)
The Mind guide to food and mood (Mind 2008)
The Mind guide to managing stress (Mind 2009)
The Mind guide to physical activity (Mind 2008)
The Mind guide to relaxation (Mind 2009)
Overcoming anger and irritability W. Davies (Robinson 2000)
Overcoming low self-esteem: a self-help guide using cognitive behavioural techniques M. Fennell (Robinson 1999)
Understanding depression (Mind 2008)
Understanding eating distress (Mind 2007)
Understanding self-harm (Mind 2007)
Understanding talking treatments (Mind 2005)
For a catalogue of publications that can be purchased from Mind, send a request with your address details to: publications@mind.org.uk or call 0844 448 4448.
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This booklet was written by Penny Cloutte, revised by Mind
First published by Mind 2000. Revised edition © Mind 2009
ISBN 978-1-903567-1-11
No reproduction without permission