FSS Newsletter :: June 2003
Quote of the Month
This is as true in everyday life as it is in battle: we are
given one life and the decision is ours whether to wait
for circumstances to make up our mind, or whether to act
and, in acting, to live.
˜
Omar Bradley
Dr. Phil's Advice on Managing Your Anger
The slightest thing can set people off. What gets you hotheaded?
Is it really worth getting angry over, especially when
a state of rage can endanger your health?
Dr. Phil offers
advice on preventing road rage, airport rage, grocery store
rage, sporting event rage ... whatever it is
and wherever it is that enrages you.
What upsets people the most is not what actually happens,
but when their expectancies are violated. When you have a
more realistic and mature expectancy set, you won't be setting
yourself up for anger if everything doesn't go smoothly.
We live in an over-crowded, over-stressed world with traffic
jams, rude people and screaming kids. Expect some blips.
If you don't expect everyone to be on your schedule, then
you won't be upset when they're not.
Stop thinking the world
revolves around you. Is the urgency you feel as strong as
you think? A false sense of urgency
stems from self-importance. Why should things have to be
the way you want them? When you think the whole world revolves
around you, then everything takes on gargantuan importance.
Reframe, relax and react rationally. Reframe. Ask yourself
what really
matters. If you are in touch with your authentic
self ˜ who you really are and what matters most ˜ then
you won't get consumed by little things that happen around
you. Don't wait for something terrible to give you a wakeup
call to put things in perspective.
Relax. Take a deep breath.
Calm down. Do you have any idea what upset you last Tuesday?
Was it worth putting your health
in jeopardy?
React rationally. Stop thinking the world revolves around
you. When you have a false sense of urgency or an inflated
sense of self-importance, you set yourself up for failure.
When you think the whole world revolves around you, everything
takes on far more importance. No one in China cares if
someone took the parking spot you were about to pull into.
Look for warning signs. We don't blow up out of the blue.
Our
bodies first exhibit signs, such as a tight chest,
butterflies in your stomach, a racing mind, sweaty palms,
or getting
flush. Recognize the signs so you can intervene before
you blow up.
You may be slowly killing yourself every
time you get angry. Any time you're aroused, the entire
chemistry of your body
changes, making you more susceptible to ulcers, multiple
sclerosis, lupus, arthritis and other illnesses. Use
that as motivation to calm down.
To better manage your
anger, recognize that you have a problem. Anger is an outward
expression of fear,
hurt or
frustration.
Take anger out of your vocabulary and start to understand
what the real problem is.
Why do angry people lash
out? Because they don't have the words, concepts or abilities
to express
their frustration
in an appropriate way. Consider alternative ways
of venting your anger, such as taking a deep breath,
aroma-therapy
or meditation.
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