Thursday, November 14, 2019
How to harness your anger to transform your life
How to harness your anger to transform your life How to harness your anger to transform your life Anger gets a bad rap, especially if itâs expressed by women, studies show, but like all emotions it has a vital place and purpose in our lives. Two new books, Rebecca Traisterâs Good and Mad: The Revolutionary Power of Womenâs Anger and Soraya Chemalyâs Rage Becomes Her: The Power of Womenâs Anger, focus on the transformative possibilities of anger. Traister, whoâs written two books on women and politics, looks at the way anger has been harnessed to galvanize social movements from Black Lives Matter to #MeToo. Chemaly, a writer and activist who writes on gender, examines the way women are socialized from early childhood through every stage of their developments to suppress anger - and how that negatively affects their health.Both books come at a pivotal time in our nationâs history, when millions of women across the country are grappling with how to inhabit this charged emotion without letting it overrun their lives. Chemaly and psychologist Deborah Rozman, Ph .D., the CEO of HeartMath and co-author of Transforming Anger: The Heartmath Solution for Letting Go of Rage, Frustration, and Irritation, offered these effective tips on how to make your anger work for you:Acknowledge and name itChemaly says a lot of women canât actually vocalize the words âI am angry.â Instead, they say things like âIâm stressedâ or âIâm tiredâ because, she explains, âWeâre socialized to minimize our anger and put others at ease.â Anger-denialists, though, are wreaking havoc on their own mental well-being. Chemaly encourages women to name their feeling, a practice called âaffect labeling,â which âhelps disrupt patterns of rumination that make us sad and depressed.â Dr. Rozman agrees, emphasizing the importance of withholding negative judgements on your anger: âItâs not an issue of good or bad. Donât enter a war with it.â Instead, neutrally recognize: âHereâs the feeling. Now what do I do with it?âGet centered and think of the bigger pictureOnce you reconcile with the fact that youâre angry, try breathing your way to tranquility. âBring it back to your heart with a technique we call âquick coherence,â Rozman says. The practice involves a series of deep breaths that focus on inhaling and exhaling from the center of your heart, while finding a place in your mind that brings you calm - maybe itâs your pet, or child, or memories of a favorite vacation spot. When anger furiously courses through your veins, the stress hormone cortisol surges, which puts your body into survival mode, a âfight, flight or freezeâ zone that impairs your ability to think clearly and with perspective. Intentional breathing lassoed to a soothing thought will enable you to access a bigger picture, so you can respond in a productive way, says Rozman.Identify why youâre angryNow that youâve entered a state of calm, start asking yourself critical questions to figure out why youâre angry. Did someone mistr eat or disrespect you? Were you treated unfairly? Did you witness something that rattled your sense of justice? Make sure youâre not weaponizing your anger against yourself. Eighteenth-century English poet Alexander Pope once wrote: âTo be angry is to revenge the faults of others on ourselves.â Dig deep to make sure your perceived wrong, filtered through your history of experience, isnât a potential misperception triggered by an old, lingering wound. Feminist historian Joan Wallach Scott wrote an essay called âThe Evidence of Experience,â about the dangers of filtering every experience in your life through your own personal history without a critical self-interrogation. For example, if I get angry over a perceived slight that I think is because Iâm gay, rather than considering other possible reasons for the slight, Iâll stay in a repetitive narrative thatâs painful to me. To avoid that, go full-blown archeologist and excavate the deepest origins of your anger. Then youâll be prepared to figure out what to do about it.Turn your anger into meaningful changeâHold people accountable,â says Chemaly, âwhether itâs interpersonally, professionally or politically.â As Traister documents, millions of women the world over have done just that, collectively harnessing their fury to affect positive social change - from Pantsuit Nation to the Womenâs March. Outside the realm of mass social movements, addressing your anger in a fruitful way may feel more challenging, but it is still possible. In a professional setting, Chemaly notes that it can be tough to navigate injustice head-on because women who express anger arenât perceived the same way that men are. In fact, studies indicate they are perceived poorly. âWhen a man expresses anger - âis pugnacious, contemptuous and indignantâ Chemaly says - it confirms our ideas about masculinity. âWhen a woman does, itâs transgressive, so in order to be heard we really learn to perform f emininity.â In the meantime, she advises women to seek allies who will advocate for them, and find or create networks or communities at work with like-minded people to work toward collective action. âMetrics show that better organized, more successful organizations are those in which employees feel connected and empowered,â Chemaly says, adding, âWhen you can posit that your anger is a form of information, it is important and valuable and can help you.ââAlways remember,â adds Rozman, âanger is meant to be a warning sign. Itâs an alert. And itâs ultimately meant for us to do something productive with it.âThis article first appeared on Thrive Global.
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