Raising Emotionally Intelligent Kids & Teens: Anger & How to be the Boss of Your Brain

Similar documents
How Can I Deal With My Anger?


How Minimalism Brought Me Freedom and Joy

CBT Skills for Anxiety and Stress Management after the Christchurch 2010 Earthquake

Lesson 5: What To Do When You re Sad

Anne Joice. Anne Joice (2005). All rights reserved. Do not reproduce materials in any form without permission.

How can I manage an outburst?

Attitude. Founding Sponsor. upskillsforwork.ca

SAM S JOURNEY A STORY OF SOMATIZATION

Calm Living Blueprint Podcast

Silence All Who Cry Out

Emoji Lesson 4 September 29/30 1

24 HOUR ANGER EMERGENCY PLAN

Dear Val: How Do I Cope with Conflict at Work?

A Play by Yulissa CHARACTERS. Seventeen-year-old Mexican. She swears a lot, especially when she is mad. She has bad anger issues but won t admit it.

How To Listen To Your Emotional Woman

The No More Worries Book. By Dr. Lewis (the worry coach)

Happiness & Attitude. Kids Activities

CAN I TELL YOU ABOUT LONELINESS?

Assembly Script. Give children 30 seconds to talk to the person next to them. Take a couple of examples.

DOWNLOAD KICK ASS WITH MEL ROBBINS

Emotional Triggers. A Workbook helping you uncover the truth of your emotions!

10 Signs You re Going Through a Midlife Crisis & 3 Simple Strategies to Get You Back on Track

Speaking Notes for Grades 4 to 6 Presentation

Thoughts of suicide. Please tell someone

The Fear Eliminator. Special Report prepared by ThoughtElevators.com

Newborn and infant death Regaining nor mality Miscarriage Feelings You and your wife/partner Stillbirth

EVERYONE IS SOMEONE LYRICS

The world needs your creativity, innovation, ideas, intuition. She needs your listening and love. She needs YOU

The Angry Adventures of Kate and Dodge

[Type text] Term Colour Term Colour Term Colour % Grade 50 Emerging 75 Emerging Expected + 95 Expected

Living with Huntington s disease. A guide for young people aged 8 12

Easy. 6 Steps. It s So Easy to Begin... Yello Dyno s Safety Party Curriculum. to safer kids - S A M P L E - Step 1: Review the Curriculum Script:

Stand in Your Creative Power

TheLittle. Person Inside Me! Copyright 2005 Global Children s Fund

STEPS. How to Look Out for Yourself. Nancy Lobb illustrated by David Strauch. Third Edition

Unhealthy Relationships: Top 7 Warning Signs By Dr. Deb Schwarz-Hirschhorn

Anne Reckling: Thank you so much for much taking the time today. Now how old were you when you were diagnosed?

How to Have Your Best Year Every Year.

On the GED essay, you ll need to write a short essay, about four

What You Need: A CD player and a CD of fun, dancing music.

Looking. Young person s wellness plan. Looking after myself. 1

Knowing when: It s Time for Table Talk

If you don t build your dreams, someone will hire you to help build theirs. Tony Gaskin

Hitting the Targets for Healthy Weight Management and Your Heart

Early warning signs of feeling anger in your body

6 WEEK REALITY CHECK

The 7 BIG Mistakes That People Make When Dealing With The Boss From Hell

SUNDAY MORNINGS January 13, 2019, Week 2 Grade: Kinder

Demonstration Lesson: Inferring Character Traits (Transcript)

The Stop Worrying Today Course. Week 5: The Paralyzing Worry of What Others May Think or Say

Safety Point: Handling Your Emotions

Managing activity. Being generally overactive. Information for you

How Your Mind Shapes Your World

7 Keys to Getting Things Done, Living On Purpose and Being Happy in the Process

Common Sense Media. The Power of Words

A Scene from. The Incomplete Life & Random Death Of Molly Denholtz. by Ian McWethy

Session 20: Balance Your Thoughts

The Mindful Gnats Workbook.

An unclear bodily whole 1. E.T. Gendlin

CHAUFFEUR DRIVEN. By: Simon Kyle Parker COPYRIGHT

FAT EXTINGUISHER INTRO & QUICK-START GUIDE. [From the desk of Troy Adashun]

Deconstructing Anger

Staying Safe.. out and about

Explanation of Emotional Wounds. You grow up, through usually no one s intentional thought, Appendix A

Originally developed by Paul Stallard Ph.D,

How to Grow A Brain. Introducing Growth vs. Fixed Mindset

With ourselves The most important of all How do we speak to ourselves What do we say??

Habit 1 - Be Proactive

Lynne Lee. There are those who speak rashly, like the piercing of a sword, but the tongue of the wise brings healing. Proverbs!

The Journaling Club. A Journey in Writing

When your friend is being abused

Coach on Call. Thank you for your interest in Healthy Ways to Manage Your Anger. I hope you find this tip sheet helpful.

Energy Meter and Shifting Tool By Stacey Mayo, The Dream Queen

Anita Pizycki, Professional Development Coach Professional Coaching Company

Bonus Training: How To Change Your Life

Mindfulness: The Key to Health and Wellness. John Orr, MA, LPCC-S Mindful Youth Cincinnati, OH

Module 6: Coaching Them On The Decision Part 1

10 Empowering Questions to Help Achieve Your Goals

Sharon Depression & Guilt

TIME TO TALK: UNCOMFORTABLE, BUT IMPORTANT! A GUIDE FOR ADOLESCENTS AND TEENS

Being in Care Being in Care

Remoji Lesson 3 September 22/23 1

25 minutes 10 minutes

Be Safe With Fire. This book is a part of our child safety prevention program, developed and published by Global Children s Fund.

Scenario 1 In the Trash. Scenario 2 Playing PS2. Scenario 3 Hurt Feelings

Quick fixes 20 quick, easy ways to stop feeling anxious AND stop cravings.

FIVE SIGNS THAT A GUY LIKES YOU HARVEY GET HOOKE HIM HOOKED FREE GUIDE BY HARVEY HOOKE KEEP THIS GUIDE WITH YOU AT ALL TIMES

Resentment is like drinking poison and then hoping it will kill your enemies.

Quick Tip #3 Ideal Body Image Page 1 of 6

Issue #1 August Key Power! To ride the wave of the future!

R o c k n R o L L R o m a n t i c

2 Well, she always bragged that she s above me, which means she s better than me. But I will show her one day. I know; you do. But I never liked her.

38. Looking back to now from a year ahead, what will you wish you d have done now? 39. Who are you trying to please? 40. What assumptions or beliefs

James Coming to the gym has made me mentally strong. Knowing what I know now, I think everyone should be prescribed gym membership.

HOPE CONFERENCE May 20, 2016

You can put a mark on the line anywhere you want, wherever fits best with how you feel about school.

"Your Vision And Goals"

DAY 3: DISSOLVING SICKNESS, PAIN & GRIEVANCES WITH LIGHT

More Thinking Matters Too Understanding My Life Patterns

Transcription:

Raising Emotionally Intelligent Kids & Teens: Anger & How to be the Boss of Your Brain We re wired to feel. Not just the good feelings but the messy, sweaty, crazy, fierce ones too. Feelings drive our aliveness, our relationships, our decisions and our humanity. It s how we connect, love, decide who s right, who s not, what s good for us and what we should steer clear of. Most importantly, feelings are the clue that something isn t right and needs to be dealt with. They direct us to what we need to find balance. Sadness is a cue to reach out to our tribe for emotional support, happiness tells us to keep doing what we re doing because it s doing us good, fear is a warning and readies us for fight, flight or freeze. And then there s anger. If it s not managed well, anger will break hearts, relationships, lives and people. If managed well, anger can be protective and motivating. Plenty of good things have happened throughout history because people got angry enough to make a difference. All feelings are important and have a place in our lives. If they didn t, thousands of years of evolution would have got rid of the useless ones by now. We can pretend that uncomfortable feelings don t exist, but that won t make them go away. Denial buries feelings somewhere deep inside us and when little seeds are buried, they grow. The more children are able recognise what they re feeling, the more they can experiment with an effective response and the less control those feelings will have over them. It s never feelings that cause trouble, it s what we do with them. Here s how to explain anger to kids and teens Explaining Anger to Kids & Teens. Tell them why it s important. Every feeling we feel has a really good reason for being there, even anger. It might not always spring to life at the best moment, but its reason for being there will always be a good one. The problem is never the feeling, but how that feeling dealt with. Feelings cause trouble when they sneak up from behind and grab on, bear hug style. When that happens, it can feel like that feeling has complete control, which it kind of does for a while. The key to being emotionally savvy and not being barrelled along by intense, powerful feelings is to turn and face them, feel them, and bring them back under control.

Anger has a number of good reasons for showing up. 1. It lets people know what you re feeling (without you saying a word!) Emotions change the way we hold our body, the expression on our face, our response to situations or to people, the type of thoughts we think and the memories that come to us. You can usually tell when someone is angry just by looking and people can tell the same thing when the angry one is you. The way your face looks when your angry, and the way your body expands to looks taller and stronger can be a warning to others not to come too close. It can also let people know they ve upset you. 2. It s energising. Anger feels bad, but what would feel even worse is being in a bad situation and not realising it, or realising it and not having the energy or motivation to change it. Anger helps us to know when something isn t right. When something happens to make us angry, the brain releases chemicals (oxygen, adrenalin, hormones (particularly cortisol the stress hormone)) to fuel our body and give us the energy to something about the problem. 3. It stops intense, difficult feelings taking over. Anger is the only emotion that never exists on its own. There is always another, more powerful emotion underlying it. When an emotion feels too intense, or when the environment feels unlikely to support that emotion, anger is a way to stop that difficult feeling taking over. Some common underlying emotions are fear, grief, insecurity, jealousy, shame. When these feelings feel too intense, anger can be a way to hold them down until the intensity of them dies down a little, or until the environment feels safer and more able to respond and help us feel better. Anger can be pretty handy like that, provided it doesn t become a habitual response. All emotions are valid, and it s important not to shut any down for too long. Being able to recognise, acknowledge and feel the full spectrum of emotions is an important part of healthy living. Explain why anger feels the way it does. Here s how to explain it to the younger ones in your life Anger is an emotional and physical response. When something happens to make you angry, your brain thinks it has to protect you from from danger so it releases chemicals oxygen, hormones and adrenaline to fuel your body so it can fight the threat or run from it. Here s what that feels like: Your breathing changes from slow deep breaths to fast little breaths. This is because your brain has told your body to stop using up so much oxygen on strong breaths and to send it to your muscles so they can protect you by running or fighting (even though we all know that fighting is a bad idea!) Your heart speeds up to get the oxygen around your body so it can be strong, fast and powerful.

Your muscles feel tight. This is because your brain has sent fuel (hormones, oxygen and adrenaline) to your arms (in case they need to fight the danger but you probably won t want to do that) and to your legs in case they need to run from it (okay you might want to do that.) You might feel shaky or sick in your tummy. This is because your digestive system the part of the body that gets the nutrients from the food you eat shuts down so that the fuel it was using to digest your food can be used by your arms and legs in case you have to fight or flee. You might feel like crying. Crying helps to relieve stress it s the body s way of calming itself down. You might feel like yelling (to fight the danger ) or running away (to escape it). You might feel like hurting someone. This is really normal, but remember that if you hurt someone with your words or your body, it will always land you in trouble. An angry brain is great at fuelling you up to be strong, fast and powerful, but not so great at thinking things through. Don t believe it when it tells you to fight or hurt people or things. Here s why What happens in your brain when you get angry? Brains have been practicing anger for millions of years, so they re pretty excellent at getting you ready to protect yourself from whatever it is that s made you angry. When something happens to make you angry, your brain fuels you up quickly and automatically to respond. The problem is that an angry brain isn t always the smartest brain and just because it s telling you to respond a certain way, doesn t mean it s the best idea. Your brain tries to make you strong, fast and powerful kind of like a superhero but anger can make people make really dumb decisions. When you re angry, your intelligence drops by about 30%, so you ve got awesome speed and strength, but your brain won t be thinking so clearly. That s a dangerous combo and if you don t get a hold of your brain and set it on the right track again, you could end up more of a villain than a superhero. There s nothing wrong with feeling angry. Everyone get angry from time to time. The difference is that heroes are thinkers and they don t hurt people. The not-so-heroic make silly decisions and even if they don t mean to, they hurt people along the way. There s a simple difference between the two and it s about which part of the brain is in charge. Here s how to make sure you ve got the right part working for you. Try this Make a fist so your fingers are curled over your thumb. Now, as explained by neuropsychiatrist Dr Dan Siegel, imagine that this fist is your brain. At the top are the higher parts of the brain that help you think clearly. (In your real brain, it s just behind your forehead). This part of the brain is responsible for reasoning, using all the information you

have to make good decisions, your creativity, and your intuition (listening to your heart and that little voice inside you that tends to know what s best for you). Then there s the lower part of your brain. This part helps to control the physical processes that keep you alive breathing, blood pressure, seeing, hearing, tasting, listening, sleeping. It s also is responsible for instinctive behaviour, which is when you respond to things automatically, super-quickly and without really thinking. Instinctive responses keep you safe. If there s, say, a lion coming at you, you could be in a bit of trouble if you had to take time to think about whether or not you should get out of the way. The bottom part of the brain responds to things without a lot of thought. It s automatic, instinctive and impulsive. It s great when there s real danger, but not so great when situations need more thought and consideration which is most of the time. This is why you need the higher brain to be in charge. When it s involved in behaviour, you can be reasonable, flexible and thoughtful. You ll still do everything you need to do to keep yourself alive, but you ll do them sensibly and when you actually need to. When you get angry, the lower brain takes over. It gets so activated that it floods the higher brain and stops it from working. Without your thinking, sensible higher brain, your lower brain can get up to some crazy stuff. Remember that the lower brain does things without thinking, so it can get a bit reckless when the higher brain isn t in control of it. The part that co-ordinates your higher brain and your lower brain exists behind your forehead. When you get angry, that area stops working and the higher brain disconnects from the lower brain. Remember your closed fist? Start to open it (but keep your thumb where it is). See how the top part of your brain (pretend it s your fingers) is kind of disconnected from the bottom part? This is what happens when you get angry. Of course, your real brain doesn t come apart but what does happen is that the higher brain no longer has control of your lower brain, which becomes free to do whatever it wants. This is when things can get a bit ugly. You might yell, scream and feel like you want to break people or things. Until you bring your higher brain back to the control deck, the lower brain will be doing all sorts of things that could land you in trouble. You feel out of control, it s because you kind of are out of the control of your thinking, sensible higher brain, to be exact. There are plenty of ways to reconnect your higher brain to your lower brain, and bring your anger under the control of a brain that is sensible, smart, creative, and able to come up with great ways to respond to things. What to do when you re angry. Anger can be a great thing when it motivates you to make a difference in a ways that don t hurt anyone. The truth is that when you hurt someone else, it will always end up hurting you

eventually. You don t want to be that person who just goes round letting the angry, impulsive, reckless part of your brain making you do dumb things you really don t want that. Anger can be a great thing. It can be the reason you protect your friend or the new kid when the bullies are giving him a hard time. It can be the reason you put wrong things right but only if you have control of your brain while you do it. Otherwise it s a mess. A dreadful mess. You could hurt someone s body, someone s feelings, their things, and you can do or say things that can t ever be put right. Be the boss of your brain and you ll be the boss of your anger. You can use it to do awesome things to motivate you, inspire you and to make wrong things right, but seriously, you ve gotta be the boss of your brain for that to happen. You don t necessarily want to get rid of your anger it might be trying to tell you something important. What you want to do is control it. You need to reconnect the thinking, flexible, higher part of your brain back to the impulsive, unthinking lower brain. When that happens, you ll be back in control, you won t be hurting anyone (you might still feel like you want to but you ll know how dumb that would be and you ll be able to stop yourself), you won t be yelling and you ll be able to make clear decisions and find great solutions. Here s how to do that: 1. Breathe. Sounds simple and it is but there s a reason for that. There s a reason we practice breathing every single moment of every single day. The first is that if we don t we die. The second is that when you breathe your brain releases chemicals that calm down the angry feelings. Anger goes down. Smarts go up. 2. Take a walk. Walk away and go somewhere else until you re brain is back under control. You want to be as smart as you can if you re having to deal with someone who has ticked you off, and the only way you can do this is to get your brain sorted. It will happen on its own, and it doen t take long, but sometimes you have to find some space so that can happen. 3. If you want to be heard, be calm. Say what you need to say in a calm, clear voice. When you yell people won t hear your message. All they ll hear is that you ve lost your mind, which, if you re angry, you kind of have. Get it back and you ll say things that make a lot more sense because you ll have your full brain with all of your smarts, not 30% less. 4. Get active. Go for a fast walk, a run, a ride, or turn your music up and dance really hard anything that gets you moving. Getting active will help your body to get rid of the angry chemicals that your brain has fuelled you with to help you fight or run away. If you don t fight or run away, these chemicals can build up and make you feel even worse. It s easy to mistake them for feeling angrier and angrier, when actually what your feeling is your brain saying, come on I ve given you want you need to be fast

and strong use it! Being active will burn the chemicals and help to settle your brain again. 5. Get the energy out. Scream into a pillow or kick a ball go for it anything that will get the angry energy that s in you, safely out of you. 6. Decide on the type of person you re going to be. Using your body or voice to hurt others is never cool. Decide that you re always going to be better than someone who loses it. If you have to, talk to an adult who can help you. For sure they would have felt angry before and can talk you through yours. Adults can be pretty great like that. 7. Give permission to all of your feelings to be there. Anger is the feeling we grab onto to keep more difficult, intense feelings under control. Anger never exists on it s own and it can be really helpful to understand what feeling is beneath it. Breathe into yourself and be open to any other feelings that might be there. Just let it happen. They ll show themselves to you when you re calm, still and open to seeing them. When you can find the feeling beneath your anger, your anger will start to ease. 8. Get to know your triggers. (We all have them!) Know the things that tend to make you steam. Are you someone who gets angry more easily when you re tired? Stressed? Hungry? Once you start to recognise your triggers, you can work towards making sure you limit those triggers when you can. Anger is a really normal thing to feel. As with anything, it can be a great thing or a not so great thing. To make it something that s helpful, it s important to make sure that your higher brain doesn t disconnect and leave your lower brain in control of things. Your lower brain loves doing what it wants, and will get you into all sorts of trouble if it s left in charge. Learning to bring your higher brain back is something that takes practice, but the person who is the boss of his or her brain will always be someone pretty awesome.