Clinicians, researchers, and patients tend to view anger as attributable to immediate circumstances and current thoughts. In contrast, systemsoriented thinking approaches anger as a contextual and dynamic phenomenon. Personal dispositional systems of anger (cognitive, physiological, and behavioral)
Experiential conceptualization and treatment of anger
โ Scribed by Sandra C. Paivio
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 75 KB
- Volume
- 55
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9762
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
An emotionally focused conceptualization and treatment of anger is described and illustrated using the case examples of Celeste and David. This approach is based on ongoing assessment of different anger processes and states. Five sources of information for emotion assessment are outlined. Assessment distinguishes between environmentally directed and self-directed anger, between overcontrolled and underregulated anger, between painful emotion and bad feelings, and between primary, secondary, and instrumental anger. These different processes and states call for different intervention strategies. The three-phase process of emotionally focused therapy for problems with anger also is illustrated using the case examples. Intervention with David emphasized accessing overcontrolled adaptive anger, whereas the emphasis with Celeste was on exploring secondary rage to access more vulnerable experience of hurt, fear, and shame.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
From the Buddhist point of view, anger is a form of suffering-because the angry individual suffers as well as his or her victims. In the traditional Buddhist view, suffering is caused by three mental factors, The Three Poisons: Desire, Aversion, and Ignorance. The dynamics of anger are conceptualize
This article outlines several therapeutic issues in working with angry clients and provides a conceptual framework for understanding, assessing, and treating them. Cognitive-behavioral interventions addressing different elements of the problematic anger are then described. However, it was emphasized
This article presents a self-psychological understanding and treatment of anger. Angry reactions are based on various types of injury to self-esteem, and on disappointments in those one holds in special esteem-such as early caretakers and later important others. When these injuries and disappointmen