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Part
2
Click here for Part 1
Everyone gets angry from time to time.
Anger is a strong emotion that gets the attention of those around us and
allows us to feel a bit better when we blow off a lot of steam. That
sort of anger is normal, human and healthy.
But anger isn’t always healthy. In
fact, it can be enormously destructive, both to us and to those around
us. And expressing anger physically – throwing a punch, breaking
something, aggressive driving – is an indication that we’re out of
control and creating a dangerous situation.
Some of us grew up around parents who
were “rage-aholics.” Their anger was explosive and out of proportion to
whatever it was that set them off. Rage-aholics are often mean:
their fury became emotionally abusive and left all those around them
feeling attacked, rejected, diminished…. and angry themselves. Rage-aholics
assault the other person and see him or her as worthless, a total loser.
The person on the receiving end feels like a scapegoat.
Healthy anger is limited in scope and
time and proportionate to whatever pissed you off in the first place.
Unhealthy anger can go on and on and looks like nuclear war. Example:
someone cuts you off on the freeway and you spend the next 10 minutes
trying to chase him down to get back at him. Instead of seeing the other
guy as a bad driver, you feel like your sacred honor has been violated!
Healthy anger is acknowledged and owned
by the person feeling it. Unhealthy anger is often denied: “I’m not mad,
you’re just a screw-up!”
Men who are prone to unhealthy anger
often secretly feel weak, incompetent or ashamed of themselves. Their
life strategy is that the best defense is a good offense, and they become
expert at assigning blame. They have great difficult accepting their
share of responsibility for problems.
Communicating with rage-aholics is
difficult or impossible, especially around emotional issues. Nothing
seems to get through their defenses. That makes a sort of sense, if you
look at this as a defensive strategy. They’re afraid they are going to
look stupid or worthless themselves, so they’ve become adept at keeping
people at arm’s length so no one will discover their secret shame. In
fact, they often don’t seem to be listening at all.
Unhealthy anger can come from growing up
around rage-aholics. Maybe it’s our model of how adults communicate, and
we decide that if this is the way it’s going to be, we’re going to be the
powerful person and not the victim. And if we’ve grown up on the
receiving end of all that rage, our own sense of self may have been
undermined by those angry, obliterating messages. We secretly fear we’re
worthless. So we learn to rage to keep others at bay and keep our
fragile sense of self intact. All that anger is just a cover-up.
It’s tough living with all that anger.
If you’re on the receiving end, it can take a toll on how you feel about
yourself. If you’re the angry one, your body is constantly being exposed
to a bath of powerful hormones that can affect your digestive and
circulatory systems.
Read the entire Anger
series.
Part 1, So Angry. Part 2,
Healthy & Unhealthy Anger. Part 3,
Managing Anger.
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