Rage is a behavior. Anger is an emotion. Anger and other emotions are not facts but they can sometimes carry important info. Anger is a sign that something we value is under threat or a boundary is crossed.
Fire can't generally be put out with fire. "Getting rage out"
to get rid of it is a myth. It's a common one. Catharsis has been shown by numerous studies to increase anger.
One study found that doing nothing at all was better at reducing anger. I tried a form of therapy that used catharsis... anger rooms, breaking things, etc. I left worse off. More pissed. More
self-injurious and kind of addicted to the high of the catharsis. My anger wasn't better expressed, managed, or processed. Breaking things in a controlled fashion can be a good way to get it in touch with anger, but not get rid of it. It's a good way to control an urge to rage but you may find the anger is still there at the end of it. That may or may not be a bad thing. It varies from person to person.
Anger can be a fuel for action and change. It has value. It can be a tool for good purposes. It's the behavior that can be the problem. Emotions are just body feelings. Separating out emotions and behavior and thoughts can make it easier to tackle. When anger is at a very high level, it can actually shut down thinking and problem solving, so regulating the anger down to a slightly lower level usually helps people DO something with it that helps it shift.
Your need for safety and boundaries was under threat. You are facing injustice. What about the opposite action of using
your voice instead of stuffing it? Not just with other people, but with yourself. One of the best ways I have used anger as a
tool is to reclaim my boundary that someone hurt me, and I will rebel against it by making sure I don't hurt me. It's like
my middle finger to the abuser to say, "NOPE, I have value asshats and I'm not doing that today!" Ok, I know it's a weird
way to handle trying to not turn the anger in towards destructive behaviors towards myself, but it sometimes works.
Sometimes it doesn't. When it does... it gives a rush of another kind. It feels POWERFUL.
Anger can be a sign we feel under threat, unsafe.
Fight or flight. Because this is
linked to your safety, and you are dealing with on-going injustice, connecting to safety might help send a message to the brain that the immediate threat over and
while anger might be needed, but not levels of anger that are an impulse to rage. When I feel a lot of anger, I have found it helpful to check how safe I am
right now in the next 30 seconds. I will grab ice to hold or do other things to get connected to the right here right now present moment.
Anger is a tough one, and I am constantly learning myself. I hope you find what
works best for you! So sorry for the shitty injustice you have been facing.