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FAMILY
CHRISTIAN
COUNSELING
Jamestown
Office Complex
3035 NW 63rd St.
Suite 101
OKCity, OK 73116
(405) 842-0684
(405) 842-2110 fax |
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Title:
ANGER PROBLEM ... WHO
ME?
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Author:
KATHY ROGERS, M.S.W., LCSW
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As a fledgling graduate student, I did a practicum
working with victims of domestic violence and sexual
assault. A woman in the shelter support group once
shared that "The bruises heal…but the words go
straight to your heart." The research is pretty
pessimistic regarding the prognosis for persons
addicted to rage and its verbal and/or physical
expression. Newton Hightower, a therapist who can
attest to two rage-related failed marriages, proposes
an innovative approach, which has allowed him to be
happily married for the last ten years. He reports
that he had tried letting out his anger by yelling and
pillow pounding. Then he tried learning to express his
anger appropriately. Both of these approaches were
based on the notion that anger was like a pressure
cooker, that the lid needed to come off in therapy so
that there would be no pressure building up to be
released on others in everyday life.
When Hightower's third wife presented him with a list
of ten behaviors to quit doing if he wanted to stay
married, he was left with only one option-abstinence.
He determined to follow a recovery model to deal with
his anger and to see if he could remain in his
marriage. He feared that all his bottled up anger
might erupt like a volcano, but he was out of options.
Instead he found that after three months of abstaining
from outward expression of his anger that his feelings
of anger had actually decreased. Like a real pressure
cooker that was allowed to sit, the steam had turned
into cool water. His wife was very specific and
behavioral and over time added 10 additional behaviors
to his list. His book, Anger Busting 101, contains the
following list:
1. Stop speaking when angry.
2. Stop staying when angry.
3. Stop staring when angry.
4. Stop interrupting---no matter what.
5. Stop cursing---completely stop no matter what.
6. Stop name-calling, no matter what.
7. Stop threatening.
8. Stop pointing.
9. Stop yelling, raising your voice, or talking in a
mean tone.
10. Stop being sarcastic. Stop mocking.
11. Stop throwing things, slamming doors, or banging
walls.
12. Stop all non-affectionate touching.
13. Stop telling "hero stories." {This means retelling
the story with pride of how the angry individual lost
his temper or made a sarcastic remark, as if standing
up against somebody.}
14. Stop sighing, clucking, or rolling your eyes.
15. Stop criticizing. Stop lecturing.
Hightower proposes an additional measure for
facilitating this behavioral abstinence. He calls it
recovery driving.
1. Drive within 5 m.p.h. of the speed limit.
2. If you drive more than 5 m.p.h. over the speed
limit, then drive under the speed limit for the next
10 minutes.
3. No honking of the horn in anger.
4. Once the other driver sees you, stop honking.
5. Stop on yellow lights.
6. If someone wants to get in front of you, let him or
her in and smile. Avoid eye contact when another
driver is angry with you.
7. Make no critical comments about anyone else's
driving.
If you have suspected (or someone you know has
suggested) that you might have a problem with anger,
you can try a simple experiment. Abstain from the
listed behaviors for one week and see what you
discover. Remember, awareness is the first step of
change. If you need assistance to abstain
successfully, help is available. Adding some new life
skills to your tool bag, such as the skill of distress
tolerance, might be just what you need to experience
exciting relationship improvements. A person who
habitually exhibits angry behaviors need not be
resigned to being an angry person. You are not your
behavior. If you, like Newton Hightower, have
experienced repeated failure in this area, change is
truly an option.
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