angerAnger is an emotion. The physical effects of anger include increased heart rate, blood pressure, and levels of adrenaline and noradrenaline. Some view anger as part of the fight or flight brain response to the perceived threat of harm. Anger becomes the predominant feeling behaviorally, cognitively, and physiologically when a person makes the conscious choice to take action to immediately stop the threatening behavior of another outside force.

 

 

Anger is one of the most misunderstood and overused of human emotions

1. Anger is a reaction to an inner emotion and not a planned action.
2. Anger is easier to show: everyone gets angry.
3. The feelings underlying the anger reaction make us feel vulnerable and weak; anger makes us feel, at least momentarily, strong and in control.
4. Angry behaviors are learned over the life-span and therefore can be unlearned and replaced with healthier patterns of coping.
5. Anger can be an immediate reaction to an isolated event or it can be a response after numerous events.
6. To repress anger is unhealthy and yet to express it impulsively, as we so often do, may give momentary relief but inevitably will carry negative consequences. To alter our angry responses, we need to understand from where it comes.

There are a variety of factors that increase the probability of an anger reaction

1. If we have seen our parents get angry first and resolve an issue after, we are more likely to use the same approach. Thus, types of anger are learned.

2. If we are frustrated and feel stressed, we are more likely to react with anger.

3. If we are tired, we are more prone to react in an angry fashion.
4. If we tend to hold our feelings inside rather than talk them out, we are more likely to have an angry outburst as the pressure increases much like a pressure cooker.

Anger Check List — How Is Your Anger?

• People tell you that you need to calm down.

• You feel tense much of the time.

•  At work, you find yourself not saying what is on your mind.

• When you are upset, you try to block the world out by watching TV, reading a book or magazine, or going to sleep.

• You are drinking or smoking marijuana almost daily to help you calm down.

•  You have trouble going to sleep.

•  You feel misunderstood or not listened to much of the time.

•  People ask you not to yell or curse so much.

•  Your loved ones keep saying that you are hurting them.

•  Friends do not seek you out as much.

Conclusion:

Anger reactions have been likened to a train running out of control and about to derail. A little anger can motivate us to take action in positive ways. A lot of anger will make us “red with rage.” The price for anger that is out of control will drive away those whom we love the most and endanger our daily normal existence.