peachpurple wrote:When you are in anger, it is best to stop arguing, pause for a few minutes, leave the situation until your head has cool off
haripriyavkl wrote:I will just step away from the conversation and look for the reason for the anger. I will go around will have a peaceful walk alone. By doing this I will get free from the situation and I will be calm.
Angie10 wrote:The thing about uncontrollable anger is that it can make you do so much irreversible damage you'll regret it for the rest of your life and lose you many loved ones. We all need to learn how to control and manage our anger, and you make very valid points. I try to forgive but sadly, don't always manage to forget.
In my humble opinion, I understand your point, but I think sometimes you just have to walk away and find another solution to cool your anger like the ones stated above. This is because the words that comes out of our mouth or perhaps our actions when we are angry can cause a direct effect on the other person we are talking to.grecy0905 wrote:Anger can cause you to have hypertension, obviously because you get high blood. It is never good because you are subjecting yourself into stress, but we cannot avoid it when situations really pushes you to feel it. I rather show my anger than keeping it when it is needed to avoid heart attack.
You are right, that is why it is always good to have control over anger. Anger is bad, and is not something to joke with.gilggg wrote:Anger have a heavy price. Not only harm to health and harm to relationships with the environment, and often, with the most precious and dear people, but harming children, divorce and family dissolution, dismissal, loss of status, reputation and dignity, loss of livelihood, advancement and entanglement with the law.
Many times the people who break out in anger feel momentary and temporary relief after the eruption, but when they see the pain and injury of the others they feel remorse, sadness and guilt. Then they grab their heads and ask themselves, "Why did I need this?" "Why did I behave like that?"
Return to Articles & Tutorials
Users browsing this forum: Claude [Bot] and 2 guests