- Joined
- Aug 14, 2022
I am curious to know what the landscape is and how different people handle anger.
I know some people who wish they were a bit more under control, and others who wish they had a bit more anger than anxiety. It's a tough balance to accomplish whichever way you approach it from.
I personally suffer from anger issues, that sometimes only really make sense to myself (most of the time justified still). But in the moment, it's difficult to really identify what's legitimate and what is just me getting really mad over nothing. Like someone answering a question in an unexpected manner because they did not understand what I was asking, but still feeling like they needed to say something.
I am conscious it's mostly something very selfish in the way that getting mad is cathartic for me. I just can't ruminate on it if something bothers me. And this sometimes leads me to get a little bit more aggressive than I should. Especially if things are not moving along at the pace I expect.
But it's also very counterproductive, because people have emotions and feelings, and nobody likes to be put in a situation where someone is aggressive to you. I know I don't.
It's not full proof, and I am still working on it, but I find that writing a script down and playing it through first is a good way to calm down and come up with a better way to interact with people, think things over and try and weed out hurtful things that might come out without having to think about it.
I've been trying this method for about a year now, and I really see good progress from it. It almost becomes second nature too, in the beginning it's a bit weird, but you really do get used to it. And every issue is not unique, so you also learn about approaches that worked better in the past and can replicate without going through the process all over.
ETA: reading this post back, I realize it might not be evident, but I swear I am not autistic.
I know some people who wish they were a bit more under control, and others who wish they had a bit more anger than anxiety. It's a tough balance to accomplish whichever way you approach it from.
I personally suffer from anger issues, that sometimes only really make sense to myself (most of the time justified still). But in the moment, it's difficult to really identify what's legitimate and what is just me getting really mad over nothing. Like someone answering a question in an unexpected manner because they did not understand what I was asking, but still feeling like they needed to say something.
I am conscious it's mostly something very selfish in the way that getting mad is cathartic for me. I just can't ruminate on it if something bothers me. And this sometimes leads me to get a little bit more aggressive than I should. Especially if things are not moving along at the pace I expect.
But it's also very counterproductive, because people have emotions and feelings, and nobody likes to be put in a situation where someone is aggressive to you. I know I don't.
It's not full proof, and I am still working on it, but I find that writing a script down and playing it through first is a good way to calm down and come up with a better way to interact with people, think things over and try and weed out hurtful things that might come out without having to think about it.
I've been trying this method for about a year now, and I really see good progress from it. It almost becomes second nature too, in the beginning it's a bit weird, but you really do get used to it. And every issue is not unique, so you also learn about approaches that worked better in the past and can replicate without going through the process all over.
ETA: reading this post back, I realize it might not be evident, but I swear I am not autistic.