PreciousChild
Platinum Member
I have not been on the forum for a while. Sometimes I find that I meander away for a while - it might even be avoidant behavior. There's a topic I'm struggling with - anger. I have certain ideas about it that I think sometimes go against what people on here believe, but I'm not sure if I have a good point or if I'm afraid of anger given that my dad was a rage-a-holic.
I agree with the stress-cup theory, and that those with ptsd are more likely to spill over in anger. I agree with Pete Walker and other authors that anger is a protest behavior that can develop out of not getting our needs met as children, and it being carried over into our grown-up lives, intensifying any angry response we may have to real events. But I further believe that through healing and choices we make, we can and should limit the expressions of our anger. A few things motivate me - 1. I've read research that demonstrate angry expressions are not cathartic. Repeat, they do not ease tensions that lesson our anger. In fact, studies show that every time we get angry, we set ourselves up to get more angry. That makes sense to me that anger makes more anger. If I want to get good at a skill or habit, I repeat. Two references: "Does Venting Anger Feed or Extinguish the Flame? Catharsis, Rumination, Distraction, Anger, and Aggressive Responding" in Personality and Social Psychology and "Anger and Catharsis" in Psychology today. 2. My son got scared when I yelled. I thought that it was okay to act "human" around him, but I realize it was not okay. We have neighbors, and I hear the dad go into yelling fits nightly. As soon as he starts to yell, his young child starts to cry. Even I feel scared - my heart starts to beat faster and I get anxious. I think that even once a year is too much. I rarely ever yell now, and I don't feel at all like I'm artificially suppressing myself. I don't feel that I am not expressing my genuine self. 3. Studies show that anger depends on how we interpret the situation, which is exactly what this forum is about - cognitive distortions. I realized that meditating, switching perspectives, etc. were highly effective to avoiding the slow burn of anger in a genuine way.
The reason I want feedback now is because I've been seeing someone, and we're getting to the point where we're sharing some of our deeper feelings. I get the feeling that he gets angry sometimes like many people do. I shared some of my beliefs about anger, and I'm not sure how he's taking it. In the past, I've wondered about how reasonable my expectations were as well.
I agree with the stress-cup theory, and that those with ptsd are more likely to spill over in anger. I agree with Pete Walker and other authors that anger is a protest behavior that can develop out of not getting our needs met as children, and it being carried over into our grown-up lives, intensifying any angry response we may have to real events. But I further believe that through healing and choices we make, we can and should limit the expressions of our anger. A few things motivate me - 1. I've read research that demonstrate angry expressions are not cathartic. Repeat, they do not ease tensions that lesson our anger. In fact, studies show that every time we get angry, we set ourselves up to get more angry. That makes sense to me that anger makes more anger. If I want to get good at a skill or habit, I repeat. Two references: "Does Venting Anger Feed or Extinguish the Flame? Catharsis, Rumination, Distraction, Anger, and Aggressive Responding" in Personality and Social Psychology and "Anger and Catharsis" in Psychology today. 2. My son got scared when I yelled. I thought that it was okay to act "human" around him, but I realize it was not okay. We have neighbors, and I hear the dad go into yelling fits nightly. As soon as he starts to yell, his young child starts to cry. Even I feel scared - my heart starts to beat faster and I get anxious. I think that even once a year is too much. I rarely ever yell now, and I don't feel at all like I'm artificially suppressing myself. I don't feel that I am not expressing my genuine self. 3. Studies show that anger depends on how we interpret the situation, which is exactly what this forum is about - cognitive distortions. I realized that meditating, switching perspectives, etc. were highly effective to avoiding the slow burn of anger in a genuine way.
The reason I want feedback now is because I've been seeing someone, and we're getting to the point where we're sharing some of our deeper feelings. I get the feeling that he gets angry sometimes like many people do. I shared some of my beliefs about anger, and I'm not sure how he's taking it. In the past, I've wondered about how reasonable my expectations were as well.