How to calm down and work through your anger

July 28, 2015

Furious. Annoyed. Enraged. Irate. Raging. Riled. Wrathful. All synonyms for a common human emotion: anger. While there's no avoiding anger from time to time, there are ways to work through it to prevent it from threatening your health.

How to calm down and work through your anger

Write a forgiveness letter or e-mail

  • You don't even have to send it. Just the act of writing down your feelings will lighten the load of anger you've been carrying.
  • If you want to resume your relationship with the person or people with whom you've been angry, however, do hit the send button.
  • One major study found that when volunteers thought about a person they were angry with, their blood pressure, heart rate and muscle tension leaped.
  • But when they imagined themselves forgiving the other person – just imagined it – their blood pressure didn't rise nearly as much.

Embrace empathy

  • True empathy means getting into another person's head and heart both to understand and feel that individual's experience.
  • You can do this in numerous ways: by visualizing the situation through the other person's eyes; by writing a story from the other person's perspective of the situation; by telling the story to a friend but taking the other person's perspective.

Work to fix the problem

  • If you are angry with a politician, policy or some public injustice, do something about it.
  • In one study, researchers tracked the brainwave patterns of students who had just been told the university was considering big tuition increases.
  • They all exhibited brain patterns signifying anger, but signing a petition to block the increases seemed to provide satisfaction.
  • Put simply, working to right a wrong is life-affirming and positive. Stewing in a bad situation without taking action has the opposite result.

Know why you feel angry

  • Think like a detective and track down clues about the kinds of situations, people and events that trigger your anger.
  • Once you're aware of them, try to avoid them if possible. I
  • f you can't avoid them, at least you'll know to anticipate them, which will give you more time to prepare for them so that they don't affect you so negatively.

Remember that anger doesn't help

  • Displays of anger don't accomplish anything except to anger or intimidate others. It is not a disciplinary tool, a communication method or an emotional weapon.
  • Anger is a damaging, personal, emotional state that is symptomatic of an underlying problem. So don't ever let yourself use anger as a threat – particularly with your children. Your anger should be your problem, not theirs.
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