Anger Management and Reacting To Loss, Threat and
Trauma
While we all must learn good anger management tactics, it’s normal
for humans to be angry, when they feel threatened, or feel betrayed, and are able to express the pain we feel. Our
bodies are conditioned to prepare us to flee or fight when we are faced with threats, and when we are angry, our
bodies are flooded with adrenaline and cortisol, to prepare us to defend ourselves. We may not be able to control
our body’s reaction to loss, threats or trauma, but we can learn anger management, and act in acceptable ways. All
anger is not bad. We can control our anger, rather than allowing our anger to control us.
Sometimes anger is a justified response that can be used to allow
people to make, needed changes in their lives. At times, anger is justified in unfair situations, and the energy
that anger provokes is what it takes to get away from harmful situations. Anger can be used to help you protect
yourself when you are in danger, or to help you take action, if you are stuck in a bad or dangerous situation. Good
anger management techniques are essential in these situations.
Anger can be a way to deal with the feelings of frustration because
things are not going as the person wants, and poor anger management skills can spell disaster in people prone to
this type of anger. Twenty percent of people have angry personalities. If you choose to be around someone who gets
frustrated easily, and expresses anger explosively, your quality of life will be drastically changed by living with
a habitually angry person who has negative anger management techniques.
Check out potential partner's coping patterns, by seeing how he
treats the significant others in his life when he is upset. If he treats them badly, chances are he will treat you
badly too. See how he acts when he is upset and threatened, especially when under the influence of alcohol or
drugs, which tend to exacerbate poor anger management skills, and don’t be foolish enough to think you can change
anger patterns another has had many years to practice, before meeting you.
Anger coping patterns lie deep within the psyche and do not change
unless the person makes a strong commitment to become a better person. People with poor anger management skills
need a structured program of anger management or therapy to learn how to change destructive
behavior.
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