Indeed.There can also be a sort of ganging up that happens when one person is perceived as being angry. All the people who don't like to admit that they are also angry deep down start projecting and brow beating and shunning.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Indeed.There can also be a sort of ganging up that happens when one person is perceived as being angry. All the people who don't like to admit that they are also angry deep down start projecting and brow beating and shunning.
You tube comment section appears to be the world community vomit ground for miserable people.
I've reverted back to childhood now, when I'm angry, I don't speak, I leave.
I'm confused as I read that your current response when angry is to leave (so you are angry in the act of walking away) but then I read that you agree that 'walking away' is not aggressive.Absolutely agree that it isn't aggressive
I wholeheartedly agree. In my opinion it is good parenting when a child has a tantrum to teach and encourage them to express their feelings in words and communicate to others in a calm manner. That being said I know of child psychologist which suggested a punching bag for a child who struggled to communicate their frustrations which led to them being angry..............When a child has a tantrum, it's not good parenting to shout back telling them that they are bad for feeling angry. But it is equally poor parenting to tell them that it's ok to have tantrums because they were angry. Instead, you teach a child that it's ok to have those feelings, but that they can express them in a way that doesn't hurt or endanger themselves or others (or property).
Only when she can look at the situation objectively can she look at her own behaviour and emotions objectively.
there's a lot of room for things to get misinterpreted or for offhand remarks to cause offence where none was intended.
There are definitely times where it's entirely appropriate to express anger directly to someone. It can be hard to decide that, especially if something someone has said or done has really hit a nerve.
What drives me is that I don't want to be like THEM. So although I make mistakes and mess up, I do try to learn from it.
society is progressively becoming angrier.
I haven't read that 'walking away' entails saying 'I need to leave this conversation for now and have some time out' or something along those lines.
but I was shunned for it, and actually ended up getting angry and a bit rude at them because I was being harassed for venting...
There can be. There can also be a sort of ganging up that happens when one person is perceived as being angry. All the people who don't like to admit that they are also angry deep down start projecting and brow beating and shunning.
Ok, but the thread is about venting anger. I'm all for getting on the soap box about politics or the cost of living etc. But to get on the soap box and get angry at old people, or black people, or women, or single parents has the potential to cause harm by drumming up fear and prejudice in others. So I don't think it is ok to vent about those things.
I remain hopeful, but I'm afraid you are right. I actually see it daily.In these cases, no amount of showing, explaining, teaching, offering of alternative ways will 'make' them learn.
I guess it comes back to the Aristotle quote, and the implication is that there are no hard and fast rules for expressing anger, feeling anger, responding to anger, responding in anger, etc. I think it is always situation-specific and one has to use discretion in each situation.Yes, when somebody is putting you or someone near you in danger. But that isn't hard to decide. When people start thinking about it being justified in some instances and not in others, then that is where the blame game and attempts to self justify come in. But where does it stop?
And that is why I advocate a more roundabout way of giving them a situation they can identify with, and then lead it back to the current situation. But this sounds so wordy and murky...
So perhaps what is needed are guidelines in terms of where one has the right to be angry and where not.