With PTSD, 99% of the time, our emotions come out as anger. It is becomes increasingly more difficult the longer you have PTSD untreated, to identify the actual emotions underlying the anger.
Anger is not an emotion. Anger is a consequence of emotions, thus you must dig deeper than anger to find what emotions are creating anger.
Look at the [DLMURL="http://www.ptsdforum.org/thread12.html"]iceberg of emotions[/DLMURL], and you need to assimilate what is creating the anger to actually help heal the problem. Are you actually feeling:
- vunerable, or
- helpless, or
- frustrated, or
- feeling things are out of your control
and so forth. The underpinning emotions are what is creating the anger. I should actually be an expert on this topic, as my anger was so far out of control, it really wasn't even amusing when I look at it now. When I finally gave in, and looked deep within to what was creating this anger, rage and hostility within me, I could then identify that I was fearful of the future, I was not in control of myself, I felt vunerable, etc etc. These feeling where what needed to be worked on to fix my anger. So, nothing like a good example:
- Fear - I was fearful of so many things:
- Losing control of myself
- Losing my wife
- Finances
- Killing myself
- Lack of friends support
- etc etc
- Vunerable - where I felt if I shared what was going on within me, maybe that person/s would exploit the issue.
- Not in Control - I had been in war zones, seen things, done things that are not generally acceptable within society, I had a weapon and I controlled every situation I was within. Suddenly, I have no weapon, I have no control, people don't need to listen to what I say if not military, and the list goes on.
You can see these are just a few examples of what I had to go through with a counsellor to identify within myself what was causing the anger. I did an anger management course which did nothing. It wasn't until I did the CBT in the PTSD course that finally counsellors and social workers had the time to fully explain the iceberg of emotions, and that anger is merely an act of emotions, and not an actual emotion itself. Learning to identify with these emotions is what helped rid anger.
Now, on a daily basis. I get grumpy some days, some part days, just as you are explaining, but I then have to apply these techniques to those times to find why I am angry when I woke up.
- Did I have a restless sleep?
- Is something coming up and I am getting anxious?
- Am I stressed about an issue?
- Do I have a busy day?
- etc etc
Whilst I may now get grumpy, I am certainly not angry like I used too, hence only grumpy, which is far less for me and those around me. I might snap here, but then apologise and get on with things, where before I would nearly kill someone and never apologise.
The toilet roll being around the wrong way may be enough to snap from anger, but was it really the toilet roll being the wrong way around, and thus a persons fault for putting it that way; or is there actually another issue that is building stress within me? ie.
- do I feel I have appointments were I'm fearful off the unknown?
- do I feel vunerable that my future is uncertain?
- do I feel helpless that I have PTSD and I don't fully understand it?
- do I feel rejected by my friends, family or spouse?
- do I feel rejected from society even?
- do I feel embarrassed about not being capable of normal duties?
- do I feel embarrassed that my partner is supporting me?
Notice how everything started with
"do I feel?" Feelings are the emotions underlying rage, anger, hostility and restlessness. Identification of these with a counsellor, partner, friend or family member, can often help you identify the "
actual" real issues of what is showing upon the surface!