Self Improvement Guide

March 30, 2008

3 easy steps to deal with anger

Category: anger management. Posted by kampoo at 8:12 am.

3 Easy Steps To Deal With Anger

Writen by Ana Weber

Why do we get angry so quickly and react almost immediately to adversities and challenges turning it inwards?

Reasons listed below:

1. lack of communications skills

2. lack of not listening correctly - no desire to understand

3. lack of validating the opposite side against us or the situation

I have built 3 easy steps to overcome the hostile reaction:

1. express yourself with words calmly and effectively

SPEAK OUT

RELEASE WITH WORDS HOW YOU FEEL AND HOW YOU THINK OF THE SITUATION OR THE MATTER OR THE RELATIONSHIP

RELATIONSHIPS ARE CREATED BY CONNECTIONS ONLY

ONE MUST CONNECT WITH THE TOOL OF WORDS AND TIME.

www.anatherelationshipexpert.com

ANA WEBER, BORN IN ROMANIA. She is a financial executive for over 2 decades. Ana is coaching individuals, groups in business, career, family, parents, teens and time relationships 24/7 internationally.

Ana Weber appeared on numerous live syndicated radio shows, television and been featured in multiple magazines, such as USA TODAY.

Ana keep a fantastic approach to life, adversities, challenges and overcomes them with a smile. She is also giving out tips how to stretch time, turn time around with less stress, more results and enjoy the time between the destinationns, only focusing on the NOW.

is anger an essential component to a healthy relationship

Category: anger management. Posted by kampoo at 5:04 am.

Is Anger an Essential Component to a Healthy Relationship?

Writen by Robert Paisola

How many times have you said to yourself that I just do not know why I am always arguing with my significant other?

Many of us have some very definite ideas about anger. Some of us see anger as destructive and hurtful. We consider it to be an inappropriate response. Many times, we equate anger with violence.

Many times, we feel that the act of being angry is simply wrong, and that WHEN we experience anger, there’s something wrong with us. Anger isn’t nice. Anger isn’t polite. And
anger certainly isn’t our friend.

Is that so?

Anger can be all of these things. But anger is also useful,
necessary and even healing. We need our anger. We simply need to
learn how to express our anger in appropriate, conscious, supportive ways.

We know that on its own, anger is neither good nor bad. It can be used to hurt, or it can be used to heal.

It may not be a particularly pleasant emotion, but it’s an important one. And angeror rather the skillful use and understanding of angeris essential to creating a wonderful, long lasting and healthy relationship.

Darin Pratt, a friend of mine who also happens to be a minister of Religious Science offers a tremendously insightful approach for understanding anger. Darin says that anger arises from a communication not delivered or an expectation not met.

Let me say that again… ANGER ARISES FROM A COMMUNICATION NOT DELIVERED OR AN EXPECTATION NOT MET!

Wow!

Anger is actually a tertiary response: our initial responses are grief and fear.

First, we grieve the death of the expectation that was not met. Next, we fear that things will never change. Finally, we experience anger.

So few of us recognize that anger can be a positive, healing
response. When we allow ourselves to experience anger, it focuses our minds, and strengthens our resolve.

We discover our own personal reserves of strength and power.

Our anger is what gives us the courage and the power to confront our fear that things will never change, by creating change.

So many of us equate anger with aggression. Why is that?

Well, we know that we believe that when we experience anger or that someone will be hurt.

In order to create a more spiritual and skillful relationship with anger, it’s helpful to recognize that we can defend ourselves without attacking.

Consider that we each carry a sword. When someone crosses a
boundary, we experience anger (because our expectation that our
boundaries will be respected was not met).

At this point, we have a choice that we must make at that point. We can choose to use our sword to attack, lashing out at the person who crossed the boundary.

This will inevitably violate our partner’s boundaries, and make our partner feel unsafe and angry.

They will, in turn, pull out their sword and begin to attack us in earnest.

The result is a classic “lose-lose” scenario, where both
participants are wounded and feel less safe than they did at the
start. That is certainly not the win-win that we choose to obtain in all of our relationships.

We do have another choice, however.

We can choose to use our sword to defend our boundary by simply removing it from its sheath and displaying it.

Brandishing our metaphorical weapon is usually more than sufficient to hold the attention of the person who crossed the
boundary.

Once we have our partner’s attention, we can calmly make
them aware that they have crossed a boundary, and ask that they take a step back and respect that boundary in the future.

Because we are merely defending ourselves and not attacking our
partner, we are far less likely to make our partner feel unsafe,
which in turn means our partner is far more likely to apologize for having unintentionally crossed a boundary.

THAT IS THE WAY TO CREATE a “win-win” situation because we feel safe once again in the expectation that our boundaries will, indeed, be respected, and our partner feels safe because they are now more aware of the boundaries in the relationship, and no longer need to fear that they will accidentally
violate them.

If we choose not to take things personally, and always assume that the boundary violation was unintentional, we not only avoid stepping into the role of victim, but we also avoid the need to forgive our partner, because we never blamed them in the first place.

Avoiding blame, by the way, is another way that we defend ourselves without attacking. When we blame someone for their actions, we are, in fact, attacking them. We cut them off from the flow of our love.

This makes them feel less safe, and frequently is interpreted as an attack. More importantly, when we blame someone, we reinforce the lie that we are separate from All That Is, and cut ourselves off from the universal flow.

So how exactly is anger essential to healthy relationships?

The Anger is our call to personal awareness.

Remember that relationships are all about meeting our fundamental needs. In every relationship, we need to feel safe and we need to feel validated.

As long as those needs are met, our relationships are truly amazing.

When we feel angry, we know something is not right. We become
acutely aware that some of our needs are not being met. Anger is
most often associated with safety violations. If we feel angry
because our validation needs are not being met, it’s usually an
indication that we have an attachment to meeting our validation
needsa sign that one of the main ways that we feel safe is to feel truly validated.

When we feel angry in our relationships, we usually respond in one of two ways. The first response is to express our anger, most often by lashing out in some way. We’ve already seen how this is always a lose-lose proposition.

The second response is to repress our anger in order to avoid a full-out confrontation. (Notice how this response also assumes that the only other way to deal with anger is to express it by attacking!)

When we repress our anger, we attempt to restore the balance in our own personal safety accounts by isolating ourselves and disengaging from the relationship.

Eventually, we will no longer be able to repress our anger, and it will manifest in a confrontation of unexpected and inappropriate intensity.

Neither response meets our relationship needs, of course.

When we cultivate a more skillful relationship with anger, however, we have a third option. When we feel angry in a relationship, we can become aware that we’re feeling unsafe, that some expectation has not been met, and that our needs are not being met.

We can take ownership over this experience, recognizing that it’s about us, not about our partner.

Remember this my friends, IT IS NEVER ABOUT THE OTHER PERSON.

And we can choose to take appropriate action. Instead of attacking or withdrawing, we can choose to engage in the relationship more fully.

Before we engage in the relationship, however, we must first
recognize that we’re feeling unsafe, and remedy this. We may be able to shift our awareness and restore the balance in our safety account in an instant.

We may need to disengage (briefly) so that we can cool down before we reengage in the relationship. Whatever the method, it is essential that we feel completely safe before we proceed. If we don’t feel safe, we won’t behave in a reasonable or rational manner.

Once we feel safe, we can explore why we felt angry.

Remember, anger arises because an expectation was not met, or a communication was not delivered.

What was the expectation? What boundary was crossed?

What was not communicated? What was not understood?

Now that we’ve identified the reason for the anger response, we can consider it objectively. The most important question is whether our expectations were reasonable.

Remember that we are responsible for meeting our minimum daily requirements of safety and validation on our own. When our unreasonable expectations aren’t met, we do experience anger, but that anger is a call to make us aware that it’s time to adjust our expectations, and this does not involve our partner in any way.

If we discover that our expectations are, in fact, reasonable, and that our partner is responsible, then it’s time to defend our boundaries and hold our partner accountable.

Holding our partner accountable, however, is not the same thing as blaming our partner, yelling at our partner, insulting our
partner, “tearing our partner a new one,” or in any way making our partner wrong.

It’s important to recognize that much of the time, all that we need is an acknowledgement that our partner has not met an expectation, and an apology. All we need in order to feel safe again is to be able to believe that our expectations will actually be met in the future.

This may seem hard to accepthow could a simple apology ever be
sufficient? It’s something each of us has to experience for
ourselves. The desire for punishment or revenge exists because we have disengaged from our relationships, and we believe that our partners are responsible for meeting our safety needs.

When we make the decision to absolutely take full esponsibility for restoring our sense of safety and choose to engage in our relationships, all we need is an apologyan acknowledgement of the boundary violationand then forgiveness comes
naturally.

So, just stay in touch with the communication patterns that you experience in all of your relationships. My ex-wife Kathryn, now I, for that matter, never understood the reasoning behind our periodic anger. Well, now we know! It creates a self sustaining relationship between two people that requires each party in the relationship to actually be emotional and to “show up” for each other!

Keep Moving Forward and Make it A Great Day!

About The Author:

Robert Paisola an international Author and Motivational Speaker and is an expert in the field of Personal Real Estate Investor Training. He is a professional speaker who has been featured on CNN, CNNFN, and the Wall Street Journal. He can answer your questions on the “Basics of the Real Estate Investing Business” to detailed issues regarding your specific transactions. Life Experience Robert Paisola is a Professional International Seminar Speaker in the Areas of Real Estate Investing, Tax Lien Investing, Rental Property Management, Real Estate Coach and Mentor Training and Business Management. He has served companies throughout the world.

If you are interested in learning the business from someone like Rob email his office at robert@trumpworldwide.com or visit http://www.allexperts.com/displayExpert.asp?Expert=38419
or contact the Success Training Network at 1-877-517-9555

5 simple steps to controlling your anger

Category: anger management. Posted by kampoo at 4:12 am.

5 Simple Steps to Controlling Your Anger

Writen by Jamie Sullivan

How many times have you lost control of yourself when you’re angry? Did you do or said something which you regretted over time?

I guess we all did. It’s normal, and afterall, we are just human beings.

Everyone of us faces problems with anger. The main difference between you and me is that, do you know how to gain control of your anger, instead of letting it control you.

It’s not easy to gain control of your anger, especially when you are provoked into such situations. Nevertheless, if you are facing with this situation next time, you can try out my 5 simple steps.

Step 1 : Identify what makes you upset

Start with identifying what upsets your feelings or emotions. Pull yourself aside from everything you are doing or the anger situation you are in, then take a deep breathe and clear your mind. Think, what brought you into this situation.

You need to know what is wrong in order to correct it. Right?

Step 2 : Use them as a stop signal

When you are done with Step 1, you’d probably already knew what made you angry. You might not have the complete clear idea of it, but it’s OK. At least you have “some” ideas.

Use these as stop signs for your anger. You’re upset because the little voices inside your head are telling yourself upsetting things. This in return causes a stir in your feelings, therefore resulting in anger.

Stop all these little voices from talking within yourself, and you’ll be able to think independantly and not being influenced by them and the situation.

Step 3 : Tell yourself positive things

It’s important to think positive. You can counteract your upsetting thoughts with framing your mind to have a positive self-message. Tell yourself something nice that will make you feel better.

For instance, “this anger feeling is only temporary and I don’t want to say or do something stupid which I will regret for my actions later.”

Put the brakes on your feelings. Tell yourself to slow down and take it easy.

Step 4 : Make yourself clear

Clarify the situation for yourself. Ask yourself, “What is really going on in this situation?”

You can then feel disappointed with the situation but not enraged at the people who are creating it.

Step 5 : Think of constructive goals

Try to set more realistic goals for yourself in regard to the problem situation that you are in.

Ask yourself, “What are the alternative solutions that I use to resolve this situation?”

Be specific as possible, and concrete.

“What can you do to change this situation?”

List out the constructive options that you have in mind in which to reach your goals.

Ask yourself, “What constructive actions can I take to reach my goals?”

Finally, choose a constructive option to reach your goal and act fast on it.

The 5 simple steps that I had just pointed out to you are exactly what I do whenever I face with anger situations. You can try them out when you face with such situations.

Everyone gets angry at times, but the important thing is, “What can you do to overcome this situation?”.

Gain control of your anger, rather than letting it control you.

Jamie Sullivan is a mother of 3 children aged between 4-16 years old and an author of “Child Anger Revealed - Your Ultimate Guide To Deal With Them Effectively” at http://www.ManageYourChild.com.

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