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sports psychology

  • S

    Anger Without Attack. Anger Without Attack:

    Anger as a Relateful Force for Intelligent Action

     

    Abstract

     

    A common psychological belief suggests that beneath anger lies sadness, implying that emotional maturity involves dropping anger in favor of grief and acceptance.  While this can sometimes be the healthiest course of emotional evolution, I argue that this framing is frequently overused and can be a form of bypassing–one that neutralizes a vital energy of action-taking.

     

    This article explores anger as a necessary, protective, and prosocial force when done in a Relateful way.  Drawing on Relational Life Therapy (RLT), developmental psychology, and applied relational practice, I propose that the task is not to eliminate anger, but to temper and aim it.  Immature anger leads to attack by following impulsive whims; suppressed anger leads to withdrawal and loveless relationships.  Mature anger enables intelligent action: action oriented towards goodness for self, loved ones, and even the target of our anger.

     

    I outline practical methods for working with anger, including clarifying positive goals, softening excess intensity to get to manageable levels through empathy, and removing language that causes defensiveness while becoming more influential.  Particular attention is given to romantic relationships in which one partner avoids anger to keep the comfort, which inadvertently reinforces harmful patterns from the other partner.

     

    Rather than framing sadness as the “truth beneath anger,” this paper positions anger as a signal of violated values or unmet needs–one that, when used skillfully, supports healthier relationships and creates more goodness in the world.

     

    —-—-

     

    Author Information

     

    Author: Shane Orton

    Background: Relatefulness facilitator; experience in personal development, therapeutic models (RLT, NLP, NARM), and meditation practices (Mindfulness, Vipassana, Metta, Heart Coherence Technique, Focusing by Eugene Gendlin)

    Affiliation: Relateful

    Contact: shaneorton12@gmail.com

     

    ———

     

    Introduction: Is Sadness Really Underneath Anger?

     

    A commonly repeated phrase in emotional work is that underneath anger is sadness.  There is truth here, but also a risk.

     

    When we stop trying to change a situation or influence another person, we may indeed find grief–an energy of accepting reality.  We mourn what we cannot have.  At times, this is not only appropriate, but necessary.  For example, if we are angry at our father, but he has passed.

     

    This is often misapplied because sadness can have us more well-liked than when we are angry.  In many cases, moving prematurely into sadness functions as a form of emotional bypassing–one that dissolves anger when action is needed.

     

    If our child is being attacked, parental anger is not something to let go of, but something to mobilize.  It’s when the impulses that anger brings aren’t helpful that anger is made out to be the bad guy.

     

    The question is not whether anger is good or bad, but whether it is utilized with mature handling.

     

    ———

     

    The Function of Anger: Action-Taking

     

    Anger exists to signal violation and mobilize energy toward change.  The energy of anger is not only useful, but essential–provided it is regulated and focused.

     

    The problem is not the energy of anger itself.  The problem is when the impulses of anger are allowed to reign while the wiser self is unclear of how to aim towards goals of goodness.  The impulses want to attack, the wiser self wants to influence.

     

    Healthy anger:

    • Has a clear purpose
    • Is directed toward protection or change
    • Does not give in to impulses to humiliate or destroy

     

    The goal is not to eliminate anger through resignation, but to bring it to a manageable level so that it can be used for intelligent action.

     

    Intelligent action means acting with clarity and intention–not using anger as a weapon, but as fuel.

     

    ———

     

    Why Sadness Is Often Chosen Over Anger

     

    Why do people try to default to sadness rather than anger?

     

    One reason is likeability.  Many people experience themselves as controlling, hurtful, and less influential when angry while they are more persuasive when they are sad.  

     

    Another reason is the safety of keeping relationships.  Anger risks burning bridges, which is especially scary when relating to a romantic partner.  Sadness, on the other hand, invites care.

     

    Choosing sadness isn’t always wrong.  I am arguing that it is sometimes overused, especially when anger can be the healthier choice.  For example, in Relational Life Therapy (RLT), they often nudge the partner that chooses to bypass anger to instead use it for the good of the relationship before the relationship becomes loveless.

     

    The cost of bypassing anger is inaction–when action is what the situation calls for.

     

    ———

     

    Clarifying Anger: Aiming the Goal Toward Goodness

     

    A Relateful approach to anger begins with looking inward to see the goodness in its intention.

     

    Before acting, look for:

    • What value(s) am I protecting?
    • What do I want them to know?
    • What do I want changed?
    • Who is this action for?  (Me?  A loved one? The relationship?)

     

    When the goal is clear, the task is to stay loyal to the goal rather than the impulse to harm, insult, or control.

     

    Anger can come with destructive impulses.  These impulses are survival instincts and are not trustworthy on their own.  The energy is useful; the impulses are not.

     

    ———

     

    Softening Anger Without Losing it: The Role of Empathy

     

    When anger becomes too intense to use cleanly, it can be softened with empathy.  The intention is not to erase anger, but to bring it to manageable levels.

     

    Empathy does not mean excusing improper behaviors or giving up on taking action.  It means seeing the humanity of the target of your anger so that your response is more informed and influential.

     

    For example, if someone is behaving narcissistically, you might imagine them as a child who received false empowerment–undeserved praise with poor parental guidance.  This does not mean pity or forgiveness, but provides context that can allow more maturity in our anger.

     

    Contexts increases influence.

     

    When we understand where a behavior comes from–even if we made up the reasons for a behavior ourselves–we can act more strategically than reactively.

     

    ———

     

    Relational Life Therapy (RLT): the Cost of Suppressed Anger

     

    RLT offers a useful lens here.  Oftentimes, RLT finds that one partner is suppressing anger in order to keep things comfortable.  This usually backfires.

     

    The partner who avoids anger creates a dynamic where the other partner can continue harmful behaviors without consequence.  This may keep the relationship in the short-term, but often leads to less love from the harmed partner, which leads to a loveless relationship.

     

    RLT encourages the less empowered partner to tap into their anger to speak up, name the bad behaviors, and create discomfort–risking the relationship in order to heal the relationship.

     

    Discomfort, in this way, is not cruelty, but a path back to love and healing.

     

    When comfort is removed, change becomes necessary.

     

    ———

     

    Anger Without Insults: Unblocking Influence

     

    One practical rule dramatically increases the effectiveness of our anger: remove insults.

     

    The impulse to call someone an idiot, jerk, or child is understandable–especially when we want the other to feel the pain we’re feeling.  However, it creates defensiveness more than invites openings for influence.

     

    Instead:

    • Name the behavior you dislike.
    • Name the impact it has.
    • Give an alternative behavior that aligns with their desires.

     

    For example, rather than calling someone an idiot, you could say:

    • “I don’t think you’ve thought this through.”
    • “I want you to research this more before deciding.”
    • (Or, the hardest one to say.) “I know you’re smart and I think you’ve been fed false information.”

     

    This will probably be difficult.  But information that comes with ego-wounding remarks are more likely to be rejected with the message itself.  Information that comes with ego-boosting respect is more likely to be well-received and influence.

     

    The objective isn’t to fight their ego, but to make the change that aligns with your goal.

     

    ———

     

    Conclusion: Anger as a Relateful Skill

     

    Anger doesn’t have to be uncaring.  When integrated maturely, anger is a tool of love.

     

    The work is not to let go of anger in favor of sadness, but to develop the skill to use anger for good–to soften it to manageable levels, clarify its goals, and keep it aimed on the right path without letting impulses to hurt take over.

     

    Relateful anger includes humanization of the other, confronts with honesty without burning bridges, and creates the conditions for influential change.

     

    ———

     

    Originality Statement

     

    This work is original, has not been published elsewhere, and represents the author’s own thinking and experience.

     

    Conflicts of Interest.

     

    None.

     

    Permissions

     

    Any illustrative examples are hypothetical.

     

    Resources

     

    • Us: Getting Past Me and You to Build a More Loving Relationship by Terrence Real
    Shane.OrtoninROAR: Research in Applied Relatefulness - Journal Submissions & discussion•...
    I’m mainly curious about how people react to this modeling of anger.  I have a relationship with anger that started from fear of my father’s anger and transformed through relating to my own anger (especially in sports)....
    family dynamics
    psychology
    anger management
    sports psychology
    Comments
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  • annabeth avatar

    Why I keep forgetting that exercise feels amazing. This could just as easily live in my journal, but in my favorite version of reality a lot of things get added in the comments, and this lives as a resource for everyone and for me the next time I forget that exercise feels amazing.

    The culture I was aware of as a kid: 

    • Athletes go to gyms. The only other people that go to gyms are vain people, and they only go because they care about having an impressive appearance.
    • Exercise is hard and painful. If it's not kicking you're ass, you're lazy.
    • I loved playing soccer all through childhood. When I started Junior High I tried out for the soccer team. I was the best player at tryouts- scored the most goals, saved the most goals, had the most steals. But I didn't make the team because I wasn't competitive enough. On the last day of tryouts I gave goals to girls who seemed like their self-esteem was getting battered by their failure to get a goal.

     

    My initial influences in adulthood:

    • In undergrad I was required to take dance class all 4 years. The dance teacher's job was to prepare us for Broadway dance auditions, which are usually "cattle calls" of hundreds of people auditioning for one spot. So you had to be the best, the sharpest, the fastest to learn the choreography, the fastest to get into position. These classes were the first time in my life I learned what "getting into shape" meant. He spent the entire first semester of freshman year teaching us what the names of our muscles were by spending an entire 90-minute session going ham on that muscle. Freshmen voice majors at Carnegie Mellon limped around campus and yelped trying to pick up their backpacks. I wasn't taught about warm ups, cool downs, or how to navigate muscle soreness. I was expected to be capable of at least two versions of the splits by the end of my first semester of college, so I spent hours doing homework in very uncomfortable body positions.
    • In my thirties I worked with personal trainers three times. I didn't know this at the time, but I've since learned from a friend who is a health coach that most people come to a personal training session and give about 40% effort, so most trainers get in the habit of pushing and pushing them to harder things in the hopes the client gets to 75 or 80%. My trainers and I didn't know that because of my dance training I was showing up giving 110%. So they pushed me the way they pushed all of their clients. And I did everything in my power to be obedient to what they were telling me to do. It took me 8 years to realize that what I had been calling "pushing my edge" had actually been the cusp of a panic attack because my heart rate was way too high and I was pushing strength training to the point of risking injury.

     

    New updates to my experiences and beliefs about exercise:

    • Thanks largely to my health coach friend, a wise ex-boyfriend, and resources from Dr. Stacey Sims, I finally was able to believe them that not only doesn't exercise have to be painful, the cortisol, muscle soreness, etc. caused from pushing create more problems than the workouts solve. And when exercise sucks it's wildly de-motivating and unsustainable.
    • I've learned through countless failed attempts and Dr. Sims that any workout plan that doesn't take my menstrual cycle into account is doomed from the start. I learned that in the days before my bleed my body takes all of the tissue-rebuilding ingredients away from things like muscle repair and diverts it all to building the uterine lining. So strength training during this time results in a week of relentless pain and soreness. I've learned that during my follicular phase I'm a literal superhero. Live it up while I can, but for god's sake do not set that as my new standard to build on top of because the cycle is going to loop back again. I've learned that women have about 30% the glycogen stores in their muscles as men, so keto and fasted workouts are a distaster. I literally need to have eaten carbs before workouts to have any legitamite fuel to work with.
    • I've had fits and starts of working out, but then I'd start listening to some damn exercise podcast, fall into my old mindset of "pushing for gains," and the habit would collapse.

     

    New intentional mindsets:

    I'm a week into returning to exercise, and so far everything about it is wildly different than before. I consistently feel the tug back toward my old mindsets, but I'm practicing reminding myself of these things over and over and over.

    • Do classes, but relinquish obedience. The classes are great for me because a very knowledgable person has crafted something great without my having to expend any mental energy at all. But the key is that I stay connected with my body and be always willing to disobey the instructor in favor of what my body needs.
    • Start slow and easy. What I want most if for exercise to become a favorite part of my lifestyle for the rest of my life. I've been mostly going to "Restorative" classes that are passive yoga stretches in a structure designed to regulate the nervous system. Nothing's hard, nothing hurts, and I leave feeling wonderful. This is SO effective at making me look forward to getting in the car and driving to the gym the next day.
    • Pride can be a great energy source. It does seem to be part of my true nature that I would like other people in the class to be impressed with me. I want to be impressed with me. I'm intentionally relinquishing the lifelong energy source of "I want to get thin and hot" and replacing it with "I wanna leave here feeling impressed with myself."
    • Two mindsets I picked up from Arun, "I like being a regular" and "third place," had me choose Austin Bouldering Project as my gym. It's just fucking cool, and very attractive people are everywhere. I like the thought of becoming a regular there. A lot. People knowing my name, new friendships, maybe even finding a romantic partner who likes going to the same gym together. And third place is based on home being the first place and work being the second place. I love the midset of choosing ABP as my third place. I bring my laptop and co-work upstairs after working out. I chill in the sauna.

     

    These are all such different mindset orientations than I've ever had before, and I hope writing this helps me remember that when I do it wisely from the right mindsets, exercise and going to the gym feels friggin amazing.

     

     

    isaac_uptrust•...
    Nice! I hope you manage to stick with it. I pay a lot of attention to the subjective experience of exercising, because I want to be someone who's "fit by default"....
    mental health
    fitness
    sports psychology
    Comments
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