Dr. Philip Ney, MD
So many millions of people struggle with anger. It seems humans
can’t get it quite right. Some people suppress it all
their lives long and others can’t control the expression,
so they hurt those near and dear to them. Why is anger such
a problem when it is as universal, natural and normal as sleeping?
The following are facts about anger:
- Anger is inevitable.
It can’t be avoided by anyone.
- Anger is both
human and divine.
- Anger comes from,
in descending order of frequency: 1) pain, especially the
pain from being
neglected, 2) fear, 3) protecting the young and the mate,
4) territorial defensiveness
5) territorial conquest.
- Anger is useful:
a) it
discharges built up emotion;
b) it
produces energy and drive necessary to do difficult tasks;
c) it
communicates strong feelings;
d) it
indicates purpose and determination;
e) it
indicates pain and distress;
f) for
knowing oneself because it is usually honest;
g) it
can cover fear and pain when people need to face the threat.
- Unexpressed anger
is damaging to body, mind, and spirit.
- Expressing anger
gives only temporary relief. The reservoir quickly refills.
Biblical Perspective
God frequently got angry, particularly at idolatry. Jesus got
angry, particularly at religious leaders who obscured the truth.
The bible has two major injunctions. 1) When you express your
anger, don’t get carried away and let it make you sin
against God and your neighbour. 2) Don’t let the sun go
down on your anger. You must deal with it daily, otherwise it
can be very bad for your health, partly because it interferes
with sleep.
Jesus got angry when his disciples seemed to be studiously
ignorant or forgetfully afraid. He got fed up, frustrated with
the people he had been trying so hard to teach and coach. Jesus
also got angry in defense of his reputation and his holiness.
It appears that God can handle anger, hot anger, honest anger,
but he does not like the cold alienating anger that emanates
from our pride.
Dangers of Anger
- It is contagious. One member in the family can affect
everybody, and the result is an irritating, insecure place
for children.
- Anger can result in scapegoating, when people will not
deal with their problems but project them onto others.
- Anger often puts children into damaging double bind conflicts,
e.g. “Johnny, come here!” This shout immobilizes
Johnny in a bind. The words say, “Come” and
the tone says “Take off!” The double bind occurs
when Johnny can’t protest or stay immobilized. “What’s
the matter with you, stupid, don’t just sit there!”
- Anger can produce internalized conflicts which result
in repetitive re-enactments that are so tragic.
- Anger produces an empathetic response of anger that makes
those closest to the angry person struggle, e.g. “You
kids stop fighting. Now!” The children’s anger
produces a response of anger within the parents. They don’t
need this because they are already struggling with their
anger.
- Anger can result from engineered self-pity, “Poor
me, everybody is against me. Boy, I’d like to get
even!”
- Anger can come from exaggerated hurts.
- Anger can make people do desperate things (drive too fast),
but that helps the person avoid dealing with their own underlying
difficulty.
Dealing With Anger
- Identify the pain, fear, etc. at the root of it.
- Express that pain, fear, etc. when you feel angry.
- Identify all the triggers to your anger and trace them
to their historic roots.
- Don’t be submissive (it invites sadism) or aggressive
(it provokes escalating aggression) but be assertive.
- Learn how to be assertive from an expert.
- When fighting, constrain it with fair fighting rules.
- When angry with God, tell it like it is.
Back to Instructive Cases
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