Intense anger in the couple relationship is very destructive. In an attempt by your partner to keep the peace, all needs,
wants, and moods, of the angry partner usually come first. This creates intense anger and resentment in your partner, which
usually is unable to be expressed. Your partner becomes co-dependent to your anger, enabling the same patterns to continue.
Your anger winds up controlling you and your family; at the same time, the angry partner feels an incredible lack of control.
Most often partners have equal trouble expressing anger in healthy ways: when one expresses it outwardly, the other holds it
in. Both partners wind up at opposite ends, constantly battling for power and control; underlying that is a battle to be heard
and validated, which never gets resolved. Your relationship becomes a series of unsolvable reactions.
When the level of anger reaches emotional abuse, the safety and security of the partner receiving the anger erodes. Any emotion
displayed by the angry person triggers fear in his/her partner and the couple relationship loses all intimacy and connection.
The longer this continues, the more intense the feelings become. Your partner winds up doing anything possible to eliminate
potential triggers to your anger. The fear becomes so intense that any emotion displayed by the angry person produces traumatic
responses in the partner.
Couple therapy includes breaking through the defense structures and protections that use anger, identifying wounds and unmet
needs beneath anger, calming down the nervous system when triggered, creating safety and connection within the couple
relationship that allows partners to witness and to have compassion for each others pain, and restoring the couple’s own
strength and resiliency.
In transforming anger, clients can expect:
A deep, insightful look at their core way of existing in relationship to self and others.
An in-depth exploration at the hurt that has been masked by anger.
Identification of family of origin struggles and childhood trauma that have made a lasting imprint on who they are today.
A look at current relationships and why your anger is so easily triggered.
An introduction to the idea that anger as a defense creates destructive patterns in relationships, but anger, when recognized as a protection, becomes a red flag, a signal that change is needed.
Acceptance of their struggle with anger and the opportunity to really be heard.
Through a new insight into the protection anger provides, clients will learn to focus on and witness their own wounding that precedes anger, to stop waiting for the source of their anger to change, and to find within themselves the strength and courage to accept the call to action: a voice holding us accountable for our own suffering.
Self-respect is the fruit of discipline; the sense of dignity grows with the ability to say no.
~ Abraham Heschel
Tou can tell a lot about a person by the way he/she handles these three things:
a rainy day, lost luggage, and tangled Christmas tree lights.
~ Maya Angelou
Randi Fredricks, LMFT, CHT, RAS, CCN, CCH ♦
1711 Hamilton Ave Suite A, San Jose, California, 95125 ♦
408-315-0645