Anger: Everybody Has It, So What Do We Do With It?
December 9th, 2008 · anger, collective consciousness, depression, depth psychology, Halton Region, Individuation, Jungian psychology, Lifestyle, Mississauga, Oakville, Peel Region, Psychology, Psychotherapy, soul, The Self, Wellness, wholeness
There is no easy way with anger. It can be one of the most powerful psychological forces that we experience. As an old song once said, "anger is an energy" — and it can be a force for growth in a person's life, or a source of misery and destruction.
At this time, the problem of dealing with anger is more on our minds in this society than it has surely ever been. As a society, we really don't know what to do with it. It is simply symptomatic of our confusion and uncertainty that a major fast food chain has created a major campaign centered around a hamburger called the "Angry Whopper"!
For many people, anger is the unacceptable "taboo" emotion, the one that has no real place in our lives, the one that "decent" or "reasonable" people avoid. This is a lesson that many of us learned deep in the womb of the family. When I think of my own upbringing, it is absolutely clear to me that most emotion was suspect, but anger in particular was completely anathema.
There is a trend in modern thinking to isolate anger, to treat it as some intruder in the human psyche or soul. There is a tendency in much of modern psychology to want to wall anger off and treat it as a specific discreet problem that has only limited connection to the whole of a person's personality. So we hear a lot about anger management and rage addiction. This type of term that ignores the fact that a person's anger stems from real issues in the whole of that person's personality.
But those who have to deal with their anger or rage as personal problem know that such emotions are anything but discreet. When they are in full force, they can often seem to take complete control of the personality, and to be completely in the driver's seat.
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