From Cary And Crystal Lake, IL: How Anger Destroys Families And How Counseling Can Help

The strongest contributor to individual character development is the family unit. You may have spent years trying to change, eliminate, or copy the influence of certain members of your family unit-consciously or unconsciously.


Consequently, if anger is part of your familys culture, you have probably noticed that it tends to spread itself to future generations. The wider it has spread, the more difficult it is to contain.


Take a look at the way members of your family relate with one another. Is there a hurtful and biting anger present? Remember, our earliest experiences communicating, problem-solving and relating to others occurs within our nuclear family. Unfortunately, patterns of anger in these relationships are then recreated in later relationships and subsequent family systems.


Fortunately, counseling and an expert treatment plan can eliminate the damage of having lived in an angry or abusive family unit.


How Dysfunctional Anger Destroys Relationships

Anger is a very common destroyer of relationships. Couples, however, often underestimate or minimize its impact by sometimes reporting that it is this anger that makes the relationship feel alive. A very dangerous notion.


How does irrational anger start? It grows in relationships which are insecure and where open communication is absent. The emotion of love then becomes buried beneath years and years of hostility and resentment. In these relationships, helplessness often exists in the present and anxiety and fear overwhelm thoughts about the future.


The news is not all bad, however. The good news is that if you are motivated to take part in marital or family therapy you can be rewarded with new optimism and hope.


The following are tips on how to limit destructive anger in your relationships:


1. When you feel angry, mentally evaluate your feelings. Ask yourself if you are over-reacting or jumping to conclusions.


2. Particularly, if you have nothing to lose, start by giving others the benefit of the doubt. Ask yourself if you have taken something too personally or over-reacted.


3. Move to higher ground; get a broader perspective. When you feel resentment building, talk your feelings over with a loved one and get additional feedback.


4. If certain relationships are repeatedly fraught with anger, assess whether or not you should stay in them.


5. If your anger feels out of control and/or mysterious and particularly, if the relationship is important, consider family or relationship counseling.


How Do I Know If a Family Member Has an Anger Problem?


Most of the time angry individuals are aware that they have problems controlling anger. Unfortunately, many of them come to accept that their anger is unchangeable, a fixed aspect of their personality and feel hopeless to to do anything about it. If you wonder whether you or a loved one may have an anger problem, look for several of the following symptoms:


1. Becoming inappropriately angry in response to mild frustration or irritation.


2. Experiencing painful feelings of guilt or regret over something that you have said or done in a fit of anger.


3. The existence of repeated interpersonal conflicts that result from angry outbursts (legal problems, arguments, damage to property, school or work suspensions, etc.)


4. Family and/or friends approaching or appealing to you to control your anger.


5. Having chronic physical symptoms which are generated or exacerbated by too much anger, such as high blood pressure, gastrointestinal difficulties etc.


Where do I Seek Help for an Anger Problem?


Mental health professionals are very responsive to those who seek treatment for anger dysfunction. Referrals to treatment professionals and services are available through The American Psychological Association, The American Counseling Association and The National Association of Social Workers.


You may feel shame or guilt about your anger issues and these problems can actually change the lives of you and your loved ones, for the worst. Therefore, it is critical to consult with a counseling or mental health professional who has many years of experience in anger management training.


What Kind of Treatments are Available for My Anger Disorder?


The most common approaches to anger management problems include the use of individual and family therapies. These therapies help one to become aware of specific triggers and thinking processes which lead to chronic anger and demonstrate how to think productively, rather than irrationally.


Individual Therapy


Individual therapy explores the root of angry feelings and behavior in a counseling format that includes only one client. This counseling approach helps the individual to focus on the most important emotions causing his or her excessive anger.


Family Therapy


Family therapy is a powerful and comprehensive way of repairing the damage caused by longer-term expressions of hurtful anger. Chronic anger commonly alienates family members from each other, resulting in strained communication. It can also cause members to be overly involved with one another in a very dysfunctional way.


Family therapy considers each members role in the dysfunction rather than just pinpointing one person.


How Marriage and Family Therapy Help


Marriage and family therapists, psychologists and mental health counselors are trained in how to identify anger patterns that pass from generation to generation. Identifying these patterns through counseling helps each client to explore his or her perceptions, prejudices and misunderstandings about the appropriateness of certain types of anger.


For example, when parents reflect on how emotions were expressed in their nuclear families, subsequent family members begin to understand the family’s inherited concepts about anger and how to correct them.

Dr Shery is in Cary, IL, near Algonquin, Crystal Lake, Marengo and Lake-in-the-Hills. He’s an expert psychologist. Call 1 847 516 0899 and make an appt orlearn more about counseling at: http://www.carypsychology.com

Does Low Self-Esteem Run In Families?

One of the interesting aspects of human behavior is that you often find that different emotional as well as behavioral patterns tend to run in families.  The same is often true when it comes to levels of self-esteem.  Sadly, un-self-aware parents often create low self-esteem in their own children without the slightest idea they are doing so or that they suffer from low self-esteem themselves  In this article I will discuss a few often overlooked ways in which parents create self-esteem issues in their children.

Most parents are blissfully unaware in how the emotional development of children works and what their role in it is.  Often, parents have self-esteem issues that they are not aware of and hold faulty behavioral patterns that then create low self-esteem in their own children.  Two of these low self-esteem behaviors are self absorption and manipulation. 

Self Absorption

One of the ramifications of having low self-esteem tends to be a person that is self-absorbed.  It makes sense if you think about it because if a person does not feel very good about themselves then most of their energy is needed just to focus on themselves to get by day to day.  It usually takes someone with pretty good self-esteem to show interest in others and to have that extra energy to put into other people. 

If a parent is self-absorbed and does not show interest in the details of a child’s life whether the parent realizes it or not the child is affected by that.  The child’s self-esteem development when young is directly related to the amount of time and energy spent by the parent showing how important the child is.  If the parent however is never around or when is around is occupied doing other things then the child feels worthless.  Imagine a parent coming home from work and instead of spending time with his son, he sits in front of the tv and barely acknowledges his kid, let alone spending one on one focused time asking him to tell him what happened during his day or showing genuine interest in him.

This child in essence feels that his father puts the ‘worth’ of the television he is watching above him.  After all, if the son were that important his father would be spending time talking and playing with him and not be glued to the tv set right?  Multiply this by years and you have the makings of a kid with self-esteem issues who now goes out in the world feeling ‘un-important’.

Manipulation

Another unhealthy behavioral pattern that is rampant in many families is that of the narcissistic parent that in essence manipulates their child for their own emotional gain.  In a healthy family the parent should be mature enough and self-aware enough to recognize that their child has certain emotional developmental needs and that the parent provides that support and attention to the child.

But what if the parent is needy and immature?  Then you have a reversed dynamic.  In this case the child, far from getting the attention and self-esteem that comes with feeling important is actually put in the position where he is forced to give attention to the parent or do the parent’s bidding in order to vicariously gain attention and worth for the parent. 

We see this in families for instance where an immature mother pushes her child into show business for her own vicarious needs instead of what is really healthy for the child.  We also see this in the father that might push his son in sports even if he doesn’t want to in order to live out his fantasies or get attention in some vicarious way. Both of these are manipulations which can harm the self-esteem of the child. 

Both parental manipulation and self absorption are instances where low self-esteem parents create low self-esteem in their own children.  This should be identified and avoided to prevent the generational continuation of low self-esteem in families.  For more great articles on self-esteem and human behavior please visit www.SelfAwareness101.com

With Degrees in Film, Real Estate Finance and Development as well as Psychology, Robert Levin writes expert articles covering a broad range of issues. Some of his websites include: www.toptenmba.com,
www.MBAonline.me, www.lawdegree.me, www.selfawareness101.com and www.tvwriter.me


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