Bailly Anger Management Guide

Anger Management Fort Worth Section


 

Anger Management Fort Worth Navigation


|

Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Anger Management For Add Kids |
Anger Management Actress Of 2003 |
Anger Management Course In Erictaster Dist |
Anger Management Classes In Ct |
Anger Management Class In Florida |
Anger Management Class In Massachusetts |
Anger Management For Children In London |
Anger Management Classes For |
Anger Management Adam Sandler Symbolism |
Anger Management Facilities |
Anger Management Classes For Teens |
Anger Management 3 Shade 45 Lyric |
Index.html |
Anger Management Class In San Diego |
Anger Management Classes Anne |

List of Anger-Management Articles
List of Anger-Management Links


Anger Management Fort Worth Best seller

Buy it Now!



Best Anger Management Fort Worth products

Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it


Main Anger Management Fort Worth sponsors


 

Latest Anger Management Fort Worth link added

Ethiccash.com, Provider of great Adsense sitesINSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on Anger Management Fort Worth!



Anger Management For Dummies (For Dummies (Psychology & Self Help))
-By: W. Doyle, PhD Gentry
-Price: $10.85 (New)
$10.85 (Used)

The Anger Trap: Free Yourself from the Frustrations that Sabotage Your Life
-By: Les Carter
-Price: $8.89 (New)
$8.78 (Used)

Anger Management: The Complete Treatment Guidebook for Practitioners (The Practical Therapist Series)
-By: Howard Kassinove, Raymond Chip Tafrate
-Price: $17.38 (New)
$14.99 (Used)

The Anger Management Sourcebook
-By: Glenn R. Schiraldi, Melissa Hallmark Kerr
-Price: $8.61 (New)
$6.20 (Used)

Hot Stuff to Help Kids Chill Out: The Anger Management Book
-By: Jerry Wilde
-Price: $5.28 (New)
$5.12 (Used)

The Anger Workbook: A 13-Step Interactive Plan to Help You... (Minirth-Meier Clinic Series)
-By: Les Carter, Frank Minirth
-Price: $6.12 (New)
$3.47 (Used)

The Anger Workbook for Women: How to Keep Your Anger from Undermining Your Self-Esteem, Your Emotional Balance, and Your Relationships (New Harbinger Self-Help Workbook)
-By: Laura J. Petracek
-Price: $11.00 (New)
$7.50 (Used)

 

Welcome to Bailly Anger Management Guide

 

Anger Management Fort Worth Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on Anger Management Fort Worth. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

Anger and the American Family: 3 Steps to Diffuse Family by Changing Your Inner Conversations

from: Dr. Tony Fiore




Case #1: Jeanette and Tom had been married 15 years. Wanting
to surprise him for his birthday, Jeanette, with her own money, bought Tom a big-screen LCD television.

Tom’s reaction? He instantly blew up and berated Jeanette for spending so much money—buying more television than they needed, a bigger model than they had previously looked at together.

Jeanette was dumbfounded at Tom’s reaction; she truly thought this would be a gift that would greatly please him.

Case #2: Jim was having a friendly beer with his brother-in-law Jack when the discussion turned to Jack’s success in life. Wanting to compliment him, Jim commented on how far he had come, how proud of himself he must be and how much he is an inspiration to others, given his background with alcoholic and dysfunctional parents.

Rather than seeing this as a compliment, however, Jack became offended and angry. He berated Jim for “putting him down," as he interpreted Jim’s comment.

Views cause anger

As these examples clearly show, people are not disturbed by things or events, but by their view of them, as Epictetusan—a Greek philosopher—observed early in the 2nd century.

When an upsetting family event occurs, you have a choice of how you are going to explain it to yourself—what you are going to tell yourself about it. This will influence how angry, stressed, or upset, you become over the event.

Learning to change what you tell yourself —your self-talk— can break the cycle of negativity that can often poison our minds when we get angry. We all have 'scripts' in our minds that tell us messages and stories about family members and how they behave.

Tom, who exploded when his loving wife bought him a new television, was telling himself things like: she has such poor judgment-buying a bigger TV than we need; there she goes again, spending money excessively; why can’t she ever do what I want her to do? Why did I marry such a woman?

Of course, none of these things made any sense to Tom once he cooled down and became his rational self again. But, at the moment of anger explosion, Tom’s self-statements seem 100% true to him.

Jack who became offended at being congratulated for overcoming his past, was actually having the following conversation in his head: he is putting me down because I had alcoholic parents; he is saying I am not capable of being successful on my own instead of 'overcoming' something in my past; he is mocking me because of how I grew up.

No wonder he became so upset at Jim’s innocent attempt at a compliment. Like many of us, Jack was responding to his perspective of what was being communicated—not Jim’s.

Changing your self-talk

The next time anger threatens to spoil a family event, try these simple steps:

Step 1: Retreat and think things over. Never respond immediately to a family anger or stress trigger. Give your body and your mind a chance to calm down so you can think rationally. Research shows this may take at least 20 minutes.

Step 2: Examine the evidence. The most convincing way of disputing negative self-talk toward a family member is to show yourself it is factually incorrect. Do not lie to yourself, but—like a detective —simply and honestly look at all the evidence at hand.

For instance, when calm Tom remembered that his wife was excellent with money and rarely overspent. Jack remembered that Jim never disparaged him and, in fact, had always supported him throughout the years of their friendship.

Step 3: Find a more positive and useful way of interpreting the behavior of family members. Tom was finally able to see his wife’s buying behavior as a sign of love and caring for him, rather than trying to hurt him or cause stress.

Jack was eventually capable of seeing that Jim was truly trying to compliment him and that he truly saw Jack as someone to be admired because of how far he had come in life.

About the Author

Dr. Tony Fiore is The Anger Coach. New anger resources are now available Anger Management for the 21st Century: The 8 tools of Anger Control print and ebook,bonuses www.stopyouranger.com. Chëck our Anger in the News blog and comment at: www.angernews.com.

2005 © Dr. Tony Fiore All rights reserved.








 

Anger Management Fort Worth News

No relevant info was found on this topic.