Anger Management Refers To
Therapeutic Techniques
Anger is a completely normal, healthy human emotion, and a certain amount of it
is necessary to our survival. It inspires powerful and often aggressive feelings
and behaviors, which allow us to fight and defend ourselves when we are
attacked.
When anger gets out of control and turns destructive it can lead to problems at
work, in personal relationships, and affect the overall quality of life. Anger
can be caused by both external and internal events, and like other emotions,
anger causes heart rate and blood pressure to increase, in addition to the
levels of the hormones adrenaline and noradrenaline. Over time, people can
suffer physically and have chronic health issues arise because of their
inability to keep triggers at bay. People with anger management issues get angry
more easily and more intensely than the average person, and the notion that
“letting it all out” helps is false, because it actually escalates anger and
aggression, which doesn’t resolve anything.
The term, “anger management”, commonly refers to therapeutic techniques and
exercises practiced by someone with excessive or uncontrollable anger to control
or reduce triggers. According to the American Psychological Association and
various reliable online sources, the goal of anger management is learning how to
control anger before it controls the individual, to reduce both emotional
feelings and the physiological arousal that anger causes. The most common
techniques recommended immediately before escalation of emotions is to stop
talking, stop staring, and leave the room. Learning relaxation techniques like
deep breathing and meditation will also help, in addition to stress management
skills, learning empathy and forgiveness, and becoming optimistic instead of
pessimistic. Prolonged mismanagement of anger can lead to serious physical and
mental disorders, and if the individual is not proactive, whether by voluntary
or involuntary means, the outcome could be disastrous.
Limits are placed on how far anger can take an individual, by laws, social
norms, and hopefully common sense. People just can’t physically lash out at
every person or object that irritates or annoys them; they need to focus on
something positive instead of losing control and dramatizing every life event.
Fortunately for these people, there are many reliable self-help resources
available online for people with anger issues, including online anger management
counseling and education at www.angermanagementonline.com, featuring easy, fast,
enjoyable classes, whether by court order or voluntary enrollment. For more
information and resources on the subject visit the American Psychological
Association at www.apa.org, and www.angermgmt.com for additional tips on
managing anger.
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