Upside Down Eagle
Diamond Member
The other day when I had posted my thread: How Do You Not Scream? A lot of forum members helped me, and gave me advice. Most of the advice was geared to venting (screaming in a safe environment). This is interesting. Until the end of 2013 I also thought that letting my anger, frustration, and feeling of being powerless, out.
I greatly upset my neighbors with this, who were scared of me, too scared to even talk to me. They would come in a "pack", so to speak, because they did not dare to talk to me on their own. It was humiliating -I would never, never ever beat somebody up who came to talk to me meaning well... but they didn't know that.
But I learned something since, and I learned it the hard way. The more I vented, the more I stayed in a downward spiral. I needed a dramatic change -a complete shift of focus. It wasn't a case of denying my anger or bottling it up, but starting to realize that anger should be used in a positive way.
Of course, I felt that I couldn't. I had gone so deep down the spiral that I couldn't see any light anymore. But I reached a point where I had to make a drastic decision: stop venting or stop living. The situation was so bad, that suicide seemed the only good option out. Thankfully I managed to climb out.
Today I found a blog post that supports the notion that venting isn't always a good idea. Links to scientific studies are at the end, together with a short video that summarizes the point.
http://youarenotsosmart.com/2010/08/11/catharsis/
I greatly upset my neighbors with this, who were scared of me, too scared to even talk to me. They would come in a "pack", so to speak, because they did not dare to talk to me on their own. It was humiliating -I would never, never ever beat somebody up who came to talk to me meaning well... but they didn't know that.
But I learned something since, and I learned it the hard way. The more I vented, the more I stayed in a downward spiral. I needed a dramatic change -a complete shift of focus. It wasn't a case of denying my anger or bottling it up, but starting to realize that anger should be used in a positive way.
Of course, I felt that I couldn't. I had gone so deep down the spiral that I couldn't see any light anymore. But I reached a point where I had to make a drastic decision: stop venting or stop living. The situation was so bad, that suicide seemed the only good option out. Thankfully I managed to climb out.
Today I found a blog post that supports the notion that venting isn't always a good idea. Links to scientific studies are at the end, together with a short video that summarizes the point.
http://youarenotsosmart.com/2010/08/11/catharsis/