Denver Anger Management

Anger Management: Evaluation Your Anger

rageaholics in denver

Anger Management Evaluation

We get angry when we look at a trigger situation and come to the conclusion that there is an injustice present. We conclude that in this situation something is not fair, or something is wrong. Something is not right or not how it should be. Someone is not doing what they are supposed to do, or something is not working the way it should.

We can get angry at other people, objects, ourselves or even at God.

But no matter the problem or who we are mad at, the root of all these situations is the same. We are angry because we have come to the conclusion that there is an injustice. Something is wrong. Something is not the way it should have been. That is what makes us angry.

We get angry when something inside of us senses this injustice, that something is not fair. Something is not the way it should be. From our perspective, there is a sense of injustice. Something deep us says, “that’s not right!” “this is wrong” or “that’s not fair!

Littleton kids understand this principle very well–even before they can talk. Walk over to a small child and steal their toy. Swipe a bottle from a baby. What happens? They start to cry, scream, and throw a fit. They get angry. Why? Because they conclude that what was done to them was wrong. And they know this even before they can talk (and long before anyone has ever taught them the difference between right and wrong).

I certainly didn’t have to teach my kids to say “no fair!” when something didn’t go their way. They seemed to know how to do this at birth!

No matter the example, every time you get mad it all comes down to the same basic principle: you get angry because you think about a situation in a certain way, and you come to the conclusion that there is an injustice, that something is wrong.

Excerpt taken from “Take Control of Your Anger: A Step-by-Step Guide to Anger Management” by Michael Ballard, MA, LPC

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