Posts Tagged ‘Anger Management’

Anger Management for Children: 5 Helpful Tips for Parents

November 26th, 2009

Change is difficult, especially for children! The “thinking” part of their brains is not completely developed yet and their emotions are immature. Although children are born with distinctive dispositions, they are effected by the emotional environment in which they are raised. Thus, parents are ultimately responsible for two levels of emotional inheritance; one nature, the other, nurture. Genetic dispositions are more difficult to identify and control. However, environmental factors are more malleable. Generally, parents are aware that their emotions, like anger, effect their children’s emotional development.

Many parents reach out for help to find emotional balance and self-regulation. As parents learn skills and change, their children change too. But learning new skills for changing behavior is not limited to parents. Children can learn anger management skills as well.

Here are 5 ways to assist your children toward self-regulated emotional selves

Identify emotions: Make or buy a set of feeling cards which show feeling faces with feeling words. Sit down with your child and have him pick out 3-6 cards that describe his feelings. Have him explain, “I felt angry when the teacher told me to stay in at recess because everybody else got to go outside.” Do this a couple times a week so that your child can integrate feeling language as well as expression. Make sure that you listen and accept whatever feelings your child expresses. Role Play:Since the fight or flight response is natural, we cannot deny the urge to express our feelings in certain ways. When we feel angry, we may want to hit or yell. It is very important to let children know that they are not crazy for feeling like this. But it is also just as important for them to understand that it’s not necessary to fight or flee when distressed. One way to demonstrate the alternative feeling choices is to role-play with them. Pick a feeling card and show how your body wants to react when you see the word. Act it out. Then act out alternative behaviors for that same feeling. Then let your child role play alternative actions to various feelings. As you come up with alternatives, write a list of behaviors or thoughts on the back of each feeling card. Self-Talk: Children experience self-talk early on. Self-talk often reflects the feeling tone of the environment of the child. One might live in a very positive environment and thus be enable to internally express positive statements. However, self-talk can also reflect the experience of a negative environment. For instance, an internal dialogue that states, “Mommy is so mean. This is so unfair. I hate life” can become “I’ve got to do better. I’m not good enough. Nobody understands me.” Children sometimes have difficulty becoming aware of their self-talk. I try to help them by describing the two sides of self-talk: positive and negative. As a way to grasp the concept of self-talk, I suggest they watch the movie The Emperor’s New Groove, where one of the characters, Kronk, demonstrates his positive and negative self-talk through an angel on one shoulder and a devil on his other shoulder. The angel and devil engage in a running dialog throughout the movie, which is very similar to our self-talk.  Children tend to identify with this and it opens up a discussion about their own internal dialogue. Emotional Eclipse: “Catharsis” basically means the purging of emotions. Years ago, people were encouraged to punch pillows when angry as a cathartic way to release emotions. On further reflection and study, however, it was found that punching a pillow in anger only increased angry behavior! In fact, it was discovered that angry feelings were quelled and decreased when people relaxed, reflected and refocused. When I teach children how to choose calming behavior when they feel frustrated, I call it an emotional eclipse. Using my feeling cards, I show them how angry becomes calm. To help your child learn the emotional eclipse technique, write down a list of angry behaviors versus a list of calm behaviors. Show them how they can overcome a negative feeling with positive behavior and eventually they will learn greater control over their feelings. To demonstrate the behavioral control, I have children dance or jump up and down to music. They feel their energy increase, much like when they are angry. Their heart rate increases. Their body heats up. Then I turn off the music and we sit, breath and talk low and slow. Their heart rate decreases. Their body cools down. Children then understand how they can use calming behaviors to overcome their angry feelings. Ultimately, children learn through modeling. How do you express your sadness? What do you do when you feel angry? If you act in ways in which you discourage your children to act, then you need to address your own issues. You might talk to them about how you too have difficulty staying calm when angry and that you want to learn how to decrease your reactions as well. If you behave calmly when your’re angry, make sure you communicate how you stay calm. Talk your children through your internal processes. You might say, “I felt really upset today at the grocery store. I was in a hurry and the clerk short changed me. I had to go back in and get her to redo the transaction. I didn’t want to be rude so I had to cope with my frustration. I just kept telling myself, she didn’t do it on purpose. It doesn’t help to get angry. Feeling upset doesn’t get me on my way any faster.” Parents have a great impact on their children. Make sure your impact is effective.

These suggestions have helped many parents teach, coach and counsel their children. Remember that teaching your children about the world of emotions gives them the tools to take care of themselves, have successful relationships and reach their goals in life.

Copyright 2008 Parent Education Group – Reprints Accepted – Two links must be active in the bio.




By: Laura Doerflinger, MS, LMHC

Joining Anger Management Groups – Enjoy Great Benefits

October 27th, 2009

Emotional problems and unresolved issues lead to anger and bouts of rage that are uncontrollabe in nature that can adversely affect a person’s mental health and this is why it is important to address and solve these at the earliest, though it is a long and ardurous challenge. Thinking that they can deal with anger management on their own is a mistaken illusion that many persons have as only those with a deep and abiding committment to change themselves win while others need to get counselling help.

Signing up with an anger management group is much like having a safety net for those persons who have been affected by anger-related issues for a long time; this provides them group therapy and lets them feel less alienated than in a psychological counselling session as they know there are others with the same problem – they are not unique in feeling the distress of extreme anger and subsequent reactions. It therefore helps them talk, discuss, overcome and solve matters at the heart of their temper-tensions during the course of the anger management class. Since these classes are conducted with an understanding approach towards those with anger management problems, they are in an environmental that is non-judgmental and therefore conducive for bringing about change in form of desirable behavior.

Being part of a support group empowers persons having difficulty dealing with anger management issues to share and discuss their problems with individuals in similar situations while giving them the comfort of knowing they are not alone. These groups may at times deal with only individual issues or can be designed in a manner to help families with a common anger management problem through counselling, group therapy and getting them involved in various physical activities that are enjoyable and fun ways to release tension, lower stress and minimize more problems associated with uncontrolled angry reactions.

The family-oriented anger management support group sessions are aimed at preventing the suppressed anger or even the apparent anger from spilling over through negative reactions onto other members and disrupting a normal family life; it is good for helping couples and children deal with anger issues within a family set-up through various problems and are run on a principle of hope and encouragement.

To avoid undesirable behavioral issues, those identified with an anger management problem are advised to join a support group, camp or retreat that is designed for their specific resolution of issue in a timely maner while keeping them in as serene an environment as possible; it can be different from their normal one and filled with unusual treats and activity scope that is otherwise out of their reach so interest levels are high and therapy is much like play-way.

For children with anger management issues, there is the choice of sending them to camps exclusively for boys or those for girls; most allow students in the 12-17 age-group to participate in various fun activities and function as a support group for them to deal with difficult situations that are likely to make them angry.

Society has opened up a lot towards recognizing anger management as a much-needed therapy for couples, families, children and even as something that needs to be addressed in the workplace. Thus, even churches have anger management support groups for congregational members to empower them to deal with daily life problems in a healthy, practical and calm manner and turn them into capable individuals that have other options of dealing with an impossible situation rather than resorting to anger or violence.




By: Abhishek Agarwal

Overcoming Anger Through Anger Management Counseling

October 4th, 2009

Getting some anger management counseling is a great idea if you do not know how to control your anger. Counseling should be sought before you become an emotional wrecking ball, wiping out everything in your path.

It is also a necessary step for family members or friends dealing with a “rage-a-holic” who has no control over this debilitating emotion, especially if it occurs on a very frequent basis. Counselors are trained professionals who teach anger management skills to those who have reached out for help.

Anger management groups will come together and you or your therapist will follow a few steps. The first is defining anger. There are anger management resources that go through the three types of anger and how it affects the body and the mood of the person consumed by the fury. It is anger from an outside stimulus, how you feel before you become angry and understanding that you are angry while identifying whether or not it is a true anger/rage moment.

When undergoing anger management counseling there are three things you need to know. The first is identifying the type of anger you are feeling. Is it mild irritation or is it a full blown rage that threatens to rule your life.

The second identifying task is to know the physiological effects the anger has on your body. Do you feel an extreme adrenaline rush and a sense of heightened emotions?

Thirdly, you have to understand how you react to the anger. Do you get verbally or physically violent? It is important to know these three steps in order to receive help managing anger.

Some anger is constructive and some is destructive. If you can identify that you are angry and take steps to avert or dissipate the anger, for example through working out or meditating, then you are using the anger constructively. A destructive example would be turning to alcohol or drugs to help you overcome your persistent feelings of anger or acting upon the anger in a harmful way to either yourself or another person.

The final two tools for anger management counseling are for managing anger. They must assess the environmental triggers, the frequency of the anger and the physical symptoms in order to begin the anger management programs. The final step is managing the anger.

This can be done through meditation, diffusion or averting the stimuli in a way that changes the situation, and/or humor. Think about the situation in an absurd light. This may help you overcome your anger once you see the humor in the whole situation.




By: MIKE SELVON