तेज आवाज की आवाज बहुतों के लिए खुशी ला सकती है।

 

Everybody love a Good shout

We are ticking temper timebomb. From a Facebook post to a roadblock, anything can set us off. But anger is not all bad. It can be healthy and even life-altering. 


A ristotle was a bright bloke. In Nico- machean Ethics, he wrote, "The man who is angry at the right things and with the right people, and fur- ther, as he ought, when he ought, and as long as he ought, is praised." But then, Aris- totle didn't live in the world of road rage, traffic jams, social media diarrhoea and im- possible deadlines - enough to make our in- ner Hulk come out.

"There's a lot of stimulus available nowa- days to make us lose our cool," says psy- chiatrist Dr Samir Parikh. Life coach Dr Vinita Malhotra Jha calls "everyday anger" a big city problem where few people are fighting over limited resources. Parikh says, "But it's just like any other emotion - it's what you do with it that makes it negative or positive, healthy or unhealthy."

ANGER VS AGGRESSION

The word on the street is that anger does- n't serve any purpose. Studies have shown that it puts your heart at risk, increases your chances of a stroke, weakens your im- munity, leads to depression, and shortens your life. And nobody really likes an angry person. Anger may become a problem, but it's not the problem. The problem is aggression - rather the aggressive actions that stem from anger, as opposed to being with the angry feelings per se. What, ex- perts say, needs managing is not feelings of anger but aggression.

For anger to be constructive, it should be a two-way dialogue - the anger response should be justified, and expressed as the first step in trying to solve a problem. Anger becomes toxic when it becomes personal. "When expressed assertively- and not  aggressively- anger is actually constructive. Healthy anger is a mix of effective commu- nication of thoughts and feelings with re- spect," psychiatrist Dr Bhavna Barmi says.


YOUR BODY ON ANGER 


When angry, your nervous system releases powerful chemi- cals. Your heart rate and breathing quick- en. Your blood pressure rises, muscles tense, and you perspire


YOU NEED CONTROL, IF...

People say you always seem angry or irritable.

 You respond with violent words or actions out of proportion to the situation.

You have a lot of broken relationships.

You lose jobs often.


VENT RIGHT

Wait. Process the situation. Let the moment pass

 Why? Don't jump to conclusions. You don't have all the info

Who? If it's not directed at you, 3 your business to react to it? is it

Write. On why you're angry. It allows 4 your brain why you're a

Witness. Talk to a friend, set a time limit - keep it brief


HEALTHY ANGER

The keyword here is control. Just like chocolate cake, anger has to be regulated. "In India, we love a good fight," Jha says. But not even one per cent of people under- stand constructive anger. The first step to- wards tapping into your healthy anger zone is to become self-aware: why you got angry and how you acted when angry. Parikh says, "Improving your work-life, adequate relaxation and knowing your trigger points will help you deal better with it." For in- stance, if you know that the commute gets you riled up, plan in advance, use soothing music or find an alternate route.


LITTLE CHANGE, BIG DIFFERENCE

Involve your partner in improving your temper. Anger is not a monologue and shouldn't be so. Jha's tip: never write angry mails or messages. "Because the hurt lingers longer when you write it - it can be revisited," she says. But don't supress it. Suppressed anger is associated with higher death rates, higher risk for some cancers, high blood pressure, and heart disease.

Used right, anger is good. But it's also the most difficult of all emotions to control.

Priyaranjan Kumar Ray

what kind of introduction you need about me I'am totally transparent person

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