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Old Aug 31, 2010, 04:50 PM
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ECHOES ECHOES is offline
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Member Since: Aug 2007
Location: West of Tampa Bay, East of the Gulf of Mexico
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Quote:
Originally Posted by _sabby_ View Post
I'm not sure if this is an old coping skill or not, but how does one go about changing an emotion?

Specifically, when I feel hurt, I tend to lash out in anger. Is this a "fight or flight" response? I've tried to sit with it and figure out where the anger comes from, but I can't seem to get there from here.

I have become better at biting my tongue when I feel that flash of anger and trying so hard to express that my feelings were hurt, but I'm not always successful. When the anger erupts, I say things I don't mean and you know that once it's out of your mouth, there is no taking it back.

Then I wonder, did I just lash out to make the person "feel" my pain or was it a protection kind of thing to get them to back off.

I don't know, I just can't seem to get a handle on this one. Any thoughts, ideas from anyone would be appreciated.

Thanks!

sabby
Feeling angry makes perfect sense.
What wouldn't make sense would be to feel happy when hurt.

Behaving aggressively even makes sense. It's a way of standing up for yourself, of 'fighting back', of retaliating or for protection to prevent further hurt.

It also makes sense, and feels much better, to be able to look at the 'hurt' more and see what that's about. When that's understood and action is needed, it can be assertive rather than aggressive. It becomes more about you and less about the other.
Thanks for this!
Muser, sabby