Healthy Anger

What’s healthy about anger? It probably just seems bad to you!

You’ve learned all of your life that anger is bad. When anger shows up, somebody usually gets hurt or just ends up feeling bad. How could that be healthy? When anger is healthy, it doesn’t even look, sound or feel like anger in the way you’ve known it. As a matter of fact, one of the reasons anger seems bad to you is that…

Healthy anger is invisible!

That’s right–when anger is healthy it seems like somebody’s just taking care of business or getting the job done. They don’t seem angry at all! Healthy anger works hand in hand with love, compassion, motivation and determination. It’s not necessarily loud or aggressive, and it most definitely is not violent!

For example, have you ever gotten mad, and then got busy and solved the problem that was causing your anger–without yelling, cussing or attacking anyone? That’s healthy anger!

I got angry when I saw how most people were trying to make anger “the bad guy” and just trying to get rid of it. A lot of people have been hurt because of efforts to stifle or eliminate anger. I saw that this approach wasn’t working, so I got busy writing books, doing workshops and creating web sites to teach folks that anger is healthy–you just need to learn what to do with it!

Healthy anger fuels effective action.

What about Mothers Against Drunk Drivers? Do you think those mothers were mad when their son or daughter was killed by a drunk driver? You bet they were! So they got busy, and formed an organization that has influenced laws and made our roads safer for everyone. The acronym for their group may be M.A.D.D. but they don’t look all that mad as they pay their bills, make their phone calls and type out those letters on their computers. Again, healthy anger is invisible.

The best definition I’ve found of the word “anger” is, “A feeling one has toward something that threatens or opposes.”

Anger comes from fear and pain–it is a protective emotion.

Here are some common examples of healthy anger

  • You’re a mother who goes to your child’s school to talk to teachers and administrators about your son being bullied by other children. Learn about preventing school violence here.
  • You’re fed up with government and how your country is being run, so you get involved in campaigning for the candidate of your choice to bring about the change you want.
  • You’re on the highway and someone is tailgating you. you don’t like it, you feel threatened, and you feel angry. Because you’re smart and healthy, you simply slow down and get out of the person’s way as soon as possible. Slowing down reduces the chance of accident and injury, and getting out of the tailgater’s way solves your problem. Learn about dealing with road rage (your own or others’) here.
  • You’re dating someone and they are consistently late to all of your engagements. You feel disrespected and angry. You simply tell your date, “This just isn’t working for me. I’ve enjoyed knowing you, but I’m looking for something different in a relationship.” No more specifics need to be given, unless the situation demands it. If you feel inclined, you might say, “I prefer to spend time with people who show up pretty close to when they said they would. I just like it better that way.” Get more information about dealing with anger in relationships.
  • The grocery store where you shop is consistently dirty, and the service is bad. A couple of examples of healthy anger would be:
    • Just go to a different store.
    • Talk to the manager, saying something like, “I really like shopping at your store. I would like it even better if it were clean and if the service was better. I just thought you might want to know that as a manager. If you think it would be helpful, I can tell you the problems I’ve had so that you have some specifics to work with.”
  • You are afraid of getting old. You are angry that your body is changing and doesn’t look or feel like it used to. You channel your healthy anger into regular exercise, healthy eating and a positive attitude about life and aging.

No one watching any of the above situations would think you’re angry. There are people all around us all of the time using healthy anger to fuel positive, effective action. But no one notices, because it is quiet, calm, focused and effective.

8 Steps To Healthy Anger

  1. Recognize that anger is a healthy, natural emotion, which you have never learned to understand, heal and express in healthy ways
  2. Find the stories of pain, sorrow fear that caused your anger
  3. Write these stories, tell them to a counselor or a trusted friend
  4. Use guided imagery techniques to heal your emotions and eliminate the underlying cause of your old, unresolved anger
  5. Identify the old, self-defeating beliefs that came from these past painful experiences, and replace them with new, positive beliefs about yourself and your world
  6. List the old, unhealthy behaviors that came from these old beliefs and make a list of the new behaviors you want to acquire and learn
  7. Make a list of the people you have hurt with your anger, write letters (you many never send) to them in which you apologize, ask forgiveness and take full responsibility for your part of the problem–with responsibility comes freedom!
  8. Learn about healthy anger and begin developing the skills to express all of your emotions–including anger in healthy ways

Healthy Anger And Your Health CD or Audio Download

Did you know that healthy anger is good for your physical health? It is also true that unhealthy anger is harmful to your health.

Toxic anger and hostility raise the level of homocysteine, a protein found to be harmful to heart function. The Institute of HeartMath has also found that the human heart functions better when we’re expressing appreciation than when we’re expressing frustration (a mild form of anger).

Listen to this free preview of the CD program entitled, Healthy Anger And Your Health: Using Healthy Emotions To Heal Your Body.

4 Comments

  1. December 20, 2008 at 7:39 pm

    That makes sense. If you bottle it up you are increasing your stress level right? But by releasing your anger in positive ways you decrease your stress and become a happier, more motivated person?

  2. December 21, 2008 at 9:04 pm

    I agree with you…

  3. January 22, 2009 at 10:47 pm

    I think your 8 tips to healthy anger are great. One point to add is that anger has a protective value. It is there to safeguard you from a perceived threat, or to stop yourself from being used and manipulated.

    That is healthy anger and shouldn’t be managed away. If you get in touch with the hurt that comes from being treated badly, that can help digest the anger. Grief and sorrow are often masked by anger and needs to be identified and dealt with.

    Energy from anger can be used as fuel to motivate yourself to develop constructive self-respectful communication skills.

    So if you don’t want your unexpressed anger to lead to getting fat, becoming impotent or getting migraines, use the anger productively.

  4. July 18, 2009 at 3:57 pm

    I no longer believe anger is wrong. I now use anger as an assertive
    process. Anger helps me to express my feelings to resolve conflict.


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