Contrary
to popular wisdom, expressing anger is not healthy
Newswise — Contrary to popular
myth, expressing anger in the moment is not healthy. According to a
new book, Getting Control of Your Anger: A Clinically Proven,
Three-Step Plan for Getting to the Root of the Problem and Resolving
It (McGraw-Hill, 2006) by Dr. Robert Allan, a noted clinical
psychologist at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical
Center, for most people and in most circumstances, directly
expressed anger will only make a bad situation worse.
The book outlines ways to stop
alienating loved ones, live a happier healthier life, and reduce the
likelihood of a heart attack or stroke.
"Often anger runs in
families, passed down from father to son, and mother to
daughter. There are several proven strategies and tools that
help people break this destructive cycle and get control of
their anger," says Dr. Allan, clinical assistant professor
of psychology in psychiatry at Weill
Medical College of Cornell University and assistant attending
psychologist at NewYork Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell.
Dr. Allan, who has studied anger
for nearly three decades, helps anger-prone people to
- Discover the reasons for their anger. Reasons for anger are often
tied to fundamental needs, some of which we are only dimly aware,
such as respect and territory. By dealing with these needs directly,
one will be better able to manage anger.
- Identify "the hook." A powerful metaphor to diffuse situations by
recognizing the good reasons we get angry (injustice and
incompetence) as "tasty looking bait" for the fish hook of anger.
Dr. Allan's method helps people to "swim on by," that is, not get
"hooked" by their own anger.
"The hook" was rated the single
most important tool by the participants of the Recurrent Coronary
Prevention Project, a large clinical trial for treating type-A
behavior that reduced second heart attack rates by 44 percent.
Dr. Robert Allan
Dr. Robert Allan is a leading expert in the field of anger
management and a specialist in coronary risk reduction. He is the
recipient of the 2002 Timothy A. Jeffrey Award for "outstanding
contributions to clinical health psychology" from the American
Psychological Association, which published his first book, Heart and
Mind: The Practice of Cardiac Psychology. Dr. Allan received a Ph.D.
from New York University