helping men with their anger

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HELPING MEN DEAL WITH

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Assisting men in recognizing, unpacking the root causes and coping with their uncontrollable anger

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Page 1: Helping men with their anger

HELPING MENDEAL WITH

Page 2: Helping men with their anger

ANGER HAS MANY FACES

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Anger & Hostility

• Hostility is not the only means of misdirecting anger

• Anger not channeled consciously comes out in all sorts of ways

• being silent (passivity or avoidance)• being negative and sarcastic• exaggerate being upset over trivial irritations• getting other people upset (to relieve one’s

own anger).

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EXPRESSION

OF ANGER

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EXPRESSION OF ANGER

• The expression of anger seems more natural for men than expressing other feelings

• In Aussie culture, men will sometimes find their other feelings of grief through their anger. Many times in working with men I have found that while a bloke is expressing anger (loudly, with movement of the body, etc.), he’ll suddenly be moved to tears. It is almost as if touching on that profound and deep feeling of anger brings a man in touch with his other feelings

• A man's anger during grief can range from being angry with the person(s) who wronged them, to being angry at themselves, to being angry with God, and all points in between.

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Men and the Protective Mode of Grief

Rosenblatt, P.C. (2001). “A social constructionist perspective on cultural differences in grief” inM. S. Stroebe, R. O. Hansson, W. Stroebe, & H. Schut (eds.),

Handbook of bereavement research: Consequences, coping, and care (pp. 285-300).Washington, DC: American Psychological Association Press.

Men around the world seem to have developed various means to deal with their anger relating to their grief. Rosenblatt's study of cross-cultural grief points out that it is consistent across different cultures that men will express more anger than women during grief, particularly if it is focused outside the self.

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Definition of Grief

Unfinished hurt (unprocessed pain)

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Men and the Protective Mode of Grief

• The denial of “unprocessed pain” is a dangerous thing and leaves most men in perpetual states of needing to live a lie

• Living this lie has big effects on our psyche. It cuts us off from the world around us and limits our capacity to relate to others. If we are busy maintaining a false image, we will not be able to be fully in the present.

Billett, K. (2007). “The Emotional Blanket” in Living Now Magazine [July], 97:10-12.

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Are Men Dealing with their Anger?

• Men with a high hostility rate (raging) are most likely not dealing with their anger

• Due to this, men are misdirecting anger out to various targets that are only tangentially associated with the original feeling

• By dealing with one's anger, we can avoid this dilemma of long-term hostility

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Suffice it to say that pain unprocessed is transmitted!

In men, this is most likely occur in the form of RAGE (hostility)

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We hurt the ones most close to us

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The Way of Weeping - to feel the tragedy of the things, the sadness of things

But there is another WAY…

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Weeping mode comes when:

• We can’t fix things

•We can’t change things

•This is so unfair

•How could this happen to me?

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Only when we reach the end of our own resources, do we face our “crisis of limitations”

Only, then are we free to move towards the weeping mode.

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If we choose to store up our hurts we become “embittered” old men

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A young man who cannot cry is a savage

And an old man who cannot laugh is a fool

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Helping men deal with their anger requires that they process unresolved grief (pain)

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Men and women process pain very differently

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•Women have a language and vocab to express their inner hurts

•They allowed to touch one another.

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•Men just go numb and close down inside.

•Men go into their caves and sit by themselves, lost for words

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Much that passes as male anger is actually sadness, loneliness or fear - and they don’t even know it!

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Me

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“If I let myself go, and opened to my sadness, I’d cry buckets. There is so much sadness…”

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•The act of a man's consciously dealing with his anger during grief is many times instrumental in his path toward healing•It can also have many other benefits. One obvious plus is that what you are on the outside is in harmony with what you feel on the inside.

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Transformation is the way forward but:

We’ve got to create the space and time to allow this process to happen

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• Men overwhelmingly try to deal with life through their heads with thoughts, theories and theologies. The head is both their control tower and their downfall.

• Another approach is to integrate body, mind, soul, and spirit.

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•Men do not now how to grieve

•They need to be taught

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When we experience in our hearts what we try to resolve in our heads- only then can we begin to weep

YOU CAN’T HEAL WHAT YOU CAN’T FEEL

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Teaching Grief Work is Essential•Men need to know that this is a special place (sacred and liminal)

It always has something to teach us

•Its a place where we can’t risk getting rid of pain- until we have learnt what it has to reach us

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If we don’t allow ourselves to grieve- we want to fix it quickly, control it, understand it- only to shut the process down

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Grief work has done its work when:-

•We don’t have to blame anyone anymore

•Even yourself

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•When I stop hiding it and denying it

•Stop projecting it elsewhere

•Acknowledge not only who I am

•But also whose I am

•And I KNOW that God has chosen to truly love me

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Sooner of later life will lead you to a dark place “in the belly of a whale”.

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The only sign He would give us was “the sign of the prophet Jonah”

That sooner or later, life will lead us into a dark place, into the belly of the great fish, into something we can’t fix, can’t control and more than likely can’t even understand

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In hindsight…We recognise that the very things that we lamented over were the very things that brought us to God

We begin thanking Him for them

So, then

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THE TREE OF LIFE

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TREE METAPHOR:Jesus used a tree to explain many spiritual things:

Mat 12:33 "If you grow a healthy tree, you'll pick healthy fruit. If you grow a diseased tree, you'll pick worm-eaten fruit. The fruit tells you about the tree.Mat 24:32 "Take a lesson from the fig tree."Luke 6:43 "You don't get wormy apples off a healthy tree, nor good apples off a diseased tree. 44 The health of the apple tells the health of the tree. You must begin with your own life-giving lives. 45 It's who you are, not what you say and do, that counts. Your true being brims over into true words and deeds.Luke 13:6-9; Luke 21:29-32; Romans 11:16-24; Rev. 2:7; Rev. 22:2

(The Message)

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THE CROWN•ONLY 10% OF TREE’S OVERALL BIOMASS (60-70% of profile, area, space used)

•MOST CONSPICUOUS PART OF THE TREE•ANY ‘ODDITIES’ MOST OBVIOUS IN THE CROWN (GALLS, BLIGHTS, INSECT DAMAGE, DEFORMED BRANCHING / TOP, ETC.)•PROVIDES ‘NESTS FOR EAGLES’ (Mark 4:32); FRUITS; PHOTOSYNTATE FOR TREE GROWTH, VIGOR, REPRODUCTION, ETC.

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THE TRUNK (bole)

•UP TO 45% OF TREE’S OVERALL BIOMASS•STILL CONSPICUOUS BECAUSE IS ABOVE GROUND•AFFORDS STRUCTURE AND TRANSPORT SYSTEM TO THE ROOTS (XYLEM / PHLOEM); OFFERS STRENGTH AND SUPPORTS THE CROWN, FRUIT, ETC.•SUSCEPTIBLE TO WOUNDING, INFECTION COURTS, INSECTS, DISEASES, ETC.

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THE ROOTS•OVER 45% OF TREE’S BIOMASS•UNSEEN; HIDDEN BENEATH THE GROUND•PROVIDES FOOD (NUTRIENTS) FOR TREE’S SURVIVAL•ABSOLUTELY ESSENTIAL FOR CONTINUED PROPAGATION, ANCHORING IN THE WIND, STABILITY, AND HEALTH/VIGOR.•SUCEPTIBLE TO TOXINS, DISEASES, PESTS IN THE SOIL MATRIX.

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TREE METAPHOR:COMPARISON OF HUMAN EXPERIENCE TO THE ECO- MODEL:

LIFE IN THE CONSCIOUS10% OF WHAT WE PERCEIVE, FEEL, EXPERIENCE

LIFE IN THE SUBCONSCIOUS< 45% OF WHAT WE PERCEIVE, FEEL, EXPERIENCE

LIFE IN THE SUBCONSCIOUS< 45% OF WHAT WE PERCEIVE, FEEL, EXPERIENCE

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WHAT DOES THIS METAPHOR TELL US ABOUT OUR OWN SPIRITUAL JOURNEY?THE CONSCIOUS

10% OF WHAT WE PERCEIVE, FEEL, EXPERIENCE IS WHAT WE SPEND MOST OF OUR TIME TRYING TO “FIX”

COGNITIVE, BEHAVIOURAL, RATIONAL THINKING i.e. “THE POWER OF POSITIVE THINKING”

LANGUAGE; THE SPOKEN / WRITTEN WORD i.e. Scripture, lectio divina, etc.

WE TRY PRUNING THE BRANCHES & BUDS; WHEN THAT FAILS, CURSE THE TREE & THE FRUIT(Mark 11:12)

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WHAT DOES THIS METAPHOR TELL US ABOUT OUR OWN SPIRITUAL JOURNEY?THE SUBCONSCIOUS

45% OF WHAT WE PERCEIVE, FEEL,

EXPERIENCE IS MOSTLY TOTALLY IGNORED

REACHED THROUGH IMAGERY, RITUAL, REFLECTION, MEDITATION, CONTEMPLATION

BEYOND LANGUAGE, AND THE SPOKEN / WRITTEN WORD – KEY WORD = INTUITION

WE ALLOW THE HIDDEN UNCONSCIOUS TO SURFACE AND TO BE ‘NOTICED’

WE CAN’T GET TO THE SACRED PLACE OF HEALING EXCEPT THROUGH THE TRUNK

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WHAT DOES THIS METAPHOR TELL US ABOUT OUR OWN SPIRITUAL JOURNEY?

THE UNCONSCIOUS45% OF WHAT WE PERCEIVE, FEEL, EXPERIENCE IS UNSEEN, HIDDEN FROM VIEW…

In this place we are mostly

UNAWARE

BEYOND THOUGHT, WORD & DEED -- CAN ONLY BE REACHED THROUGH SITTING WITH THE FATHER

No ABSOLUTES here

KEY WORD = LIMINALITY

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WHAT DOES THIS METAPHOR TELL US ABOUT OUR OWN SPIRITUAL JOURNEY?

THE UNCONSCIOUSIS LIKE: THE SOIL SUBSTRATE

IT CONTAINS HIDDEN ANXIETIES, FEARS, FEELINGS, ETC.

“TOXINS” TO BE NEUTRALIZED – JUST LIKE THIS POGO CARTOON

VERY OFTEN THE ‘TOXINS’ ARE US…

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Conscious Mind

Deeper Awareness(Why does the fruit die?)

Epiphany (hearing the voice of God)

Intuition (experiential via ritual)

The Awareness Pyramid

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The Intention is to:

Develop a consistent “approach” to explore from the shoots to the roots

MAKING THE UNCONSCIOUS – CONSCIOUS

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SELF IDENTITY

The Male Spiritual JourneyStage of Ascent- Needs to make and keep promises

Stage of Descent-Needs to rest in God’s promises and model the wholeness/holiness for other

Old Fool

Crisis of Limitation 30-50

Embittering Journey

Male

Initiation

Early teens

Holy Fool

Angry Young Man

Young Fool

Wisdom

Journey

Heroic Journey

1-32

God’s beloved son, mellow “grandfather” who can hold together the paradoxes because God has done it in him. God is finally in control. Return to simplicity, to the garden beyond judgements, “reason” and control to wisdom. Being human more important than self-image, role, power, prestige or possessions. He has it all

Needs

Spiritual guidance because rules no longer work in their old form. Letting go, trust, patience, surrender, holy abandonment, compassion, the dark night of faith, the Abrahamic Journey from what you have to what you don’t have. Finally secure enough to be insecure. Time of painful insights and major surgery. Painful redefining victory and success; putting on the Mind of Christ. Cannot fake prayer anymore. The shadow is not just tolerated, but embraced and forgiven and seen as gift. Mercy instead of sacrifice

The mid-life crisis: a time of inner loss of meaning, sometimes accompanied by failure, falling apart and “acting out” to regain power and control. Confrontation with one’s limits, with paradox and mystery- with the cross. Heroic virtues don’t work anymore, nor do they always help. Needs humility, honesty. Early movement from self-control to the beginnings of god control

Appropriate sense of one’s boundaries, a sense of self adequate to let go of self: The grain of wheat must die or remain just a grain of wheat (John 12:24)

Never gets to experience his own power, goodness or potential (in some cases a head start on the spiritual journey- early initiation- if he can see God in it and comes to a deep sense of self) Normally a negative acting out.

Necessary

Period of

idealism. Healthy young man needs to experience his own power and possibilities. Necessary egocentrism: not in love with God, but in love with the idea of being in love.

Doesn’t get it; tries to keep ascending despite the evidence and the invitation; the shallow male

Confrontation, but no enlightenment. Wounds did not become sacred wounds;

still looking for something to blame.

The negative and cynical man