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- Xref: sparky alt.support:1465 alt.recovery:3601
- Newsgroups: alt.support,alt.recovery
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!leland.Stanford.EDU!sykopath
- From: sykopath@leland.Stanford.EDU (Mickey)
- Subject: Re: ANGER!!!!!!!
- Message-ID: <1992Nov24.021622.23358@leland.Stanford.EDU>
- Sender: news@leland.Stanford.EDU (Mr News)
- Organization: DSG, Stanford University, CA 94305, USA
- References: <1992Nov17.181707.22193@athena.cs.uga.edu>
- Date: Tue, 24 Nov 92 02:16:22 GMT
- Lines: 120
-
- In article <1992Nov17.181707.22193@athena.cs.uga.edu> heath@athena.cs.uga.edu (Terrance Heath) writes:
- >
- > Forgive me guys & gals, but I gotta vent for a second or two.
-
- *hug*. Better here than just about anywhere else...:)
-
- >I'm 4 months sober
-
- Congratulations!
-
- >helping to calm it fires. Now I'm dealing with it sober, and I'm not
- >sure I'm dealing with it well. I know I can't afford to get angry, or
-
- If you're dealing with it sober, you're dealing with it well.
- Heck, you're dealing with it! That's a lot more than most people do.
- Hang in there, and I know you can work it out.
-
- >else, but no one has been able to give me any magic words or any
- >sure-fire methods of doing this (I know, I know. "Don't drink and go
-
- I don't have any sure-fire cures, but there's just a chance that I
- could help you get a handle on some of the reasons why you might be
- getting angry...which can be a help in itself.
-
- The situations where I get the most angry are not when I'm in danger,
- or afraid...nor when someone's hurt me...but when I feel like an
- injustice has been done, and I'm helpless to correct it. From the
- way you wrote about this situation, it sounded like you might be in
- a similar one, and I thought that my thoughts might help...?
-
- The thing that makes me the angriest in such a situation is when, in spite
- of all evidence to the contrary, I still deep down inside have a nagging
- suspicion that I'm at fault. I don't know your personal Insecurity
- Quotient, but if it's relatively high like mine, you might want to look
- into this as a possible contributing factor.
-
- Anyway, when I'm angered because of such a thing, the greatest help for me
- is for someone, anyone, to come along and point out that I *was* treated
- unjustly, that I *do* have a legitimate grievance, that I'm *not* at
- fault...then I can let go of the injustice and get on with my life.
-
- >I've made, but yesterday my REAL boss - the one who has the final say
- >- told me that I have been improving.) So today, while I'm doing my
-
- Evidence one. The real boss, whose job it is to know, and to evaluate
- you without bias, spoke favorably to you of the quality of your work.
-
- >job (stamping books) she comes up to me and says "There's no need to
- >be so loud, Terrance. I know what you're doing." And walked off.
-
- Evidence two. "I know what you're doing." in a context like that is
- intrinsically and gratuitously insulting when directed at anyone over
- the age of about 10.
-
- >and she waved me off again. Finally, before I left, I cornered her
- >in her office and asked "Was I doing something wrong out there?",
- >looking her straight in the eye. She finally said "No, you weren't
- >doing anything wrong. Forget about it." And I left.
-
- Evidence three. When finally confronted with a direct and straightforward
- question (and btw, Terrance, congratulations. *hug*. you handled it just
- right), she admitted that you'd done nothing wrong.
-
- > BUT I'M SO ANGRY I COULD CHEERFULLY CHOKE THE LIVING SHIT OUT
- >OF THIS WOMAN!!!!!! AND I DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO ABOUT IT (I just got
- >off of work, and I'm still shaking with anger).
-
- Y'know what? You've got a perfect right to be angry! You've been
- shabbily treated by someone who should know better, and who didn't
- even have the decency to apologize when confronted with it.
- You weren't at fault for the unpleasantness that occurred, you did nothing
- wrong, and you got treated badly for it. You have a perfect right
- to be angry.
-
- There is one other thing to consider, however.
- "Here lies the body of Dan McGrey
- Who died while taking his right-of-way.
- He was right, dead right, as he sped along;
- But he's just as dead as if he'd been wrong."
-
- While acknowledging your right to a justifiable anger may prove to be
- liberating and healthy, allowing it to stay in charge and consume your
- life would be quite possibly the worst decision you could make.
- I've simply found that admitting my right to be angry makes it
- paradoxically easier to not dwell on or even experience that anger.
-
- Let me know if this helps at all, please? It may be just my mind that works
- this way...but if not, it might be a good thing to keep in mind...
-
- > But is there anyone out there who has some suggestions about
- >how to deal with situations like that, and how to deal with anger? I
- >need some advice.
-
- I encountered a similar one when I read the three postings by CFK...
- ...to see someone like that able to walk in and mess up this (IMHO
- wonderful) newsgroup just because he felt like that made me incredibly
- angry. If nothing else, it seemed so unfair to the people whose problems
- he was so callously mocking. And I remained upset, fuming mad, until I
- read the reply posts by other people on the net, and realized that
- yes, he had in fact been exactly as offensive as I'd thought, that
- my reaction was completely normal and ordinary, and that I was perfectly
- free to hate him, or flame him, or even forget him; whatever was
- best for me. Quite frankly, my strongest emotion towards him at this
- point is pity, for whatever happened to him to make him so hateful
- and hurting.
- The best way I've found to deal with anger is to accept it as a natural
- and even appropriate emotional reaction...
- ...but then to remember that it is *only* an emotional reaction, and
- that the actions I take, based on it or not, are *my* responsibility.
- Not the feelings; those are justified and appropriate, and the only
- reason to not feel them is that they really aren't very pleasant, and
- tend to give me ulcers. And somehow, in the simple act of realizing this,
- I become able to let go of at least a good portion of the anger.
-
- I hope that somewhere in the above you find something of help to you...
-
- *hugs*,
-
- Mickey "What time I am afraid, I will trust in Thee.
- Psalm 56:3." Phoenix.
-