Tag Archives: Needs

The third part in becoming friendly with anger is being willing to connect

The third stage before talking it out with the other party is to consider what may be going on for them that had them behave or make the decisions that have stimulated you.  These actions  are similar to the process you just completed in determining your own feelings and needs yet now it is to imagine what is alive for them.  What stimulated their behaviour or decisions.

  1. Consider what the other party/parties may be feeling.
  2. Connect to what needs they have.

Once you are comfortable with having some understanding of their perspective and what might  going on for them, make a choice if you want to share what’s alive for you, or if you want to listen to them first.  Begin to connect, start talking.

In the model that Dr. Marshall Rosenberg has written about in Nonviolent Communication, he suggests following a guideline to follow to support creating a new dialogue. To view this process – go to NVC – four part process

For Parts one – The first part in becoming friendly with anger begins with understanding its function

and two – The second part in becoming friendly with anger is being willing to recognize our anger verses being angry

and four for those who are ready for a bigger challenge in their established practice – Part four – in becoming friendly with anger deepening the needs consciousness 

The second part in becoming friendly with anger is being willing to recognize our anger verses being angry

In the article called, The first part in becoming friendly with anger begins with understanding its function,  we left off with the question of, “How do we begin to recognize that when we feel anger in our daily relationships it is that our danger signals are simply telling us we are not getting our needs met?”   The first three steps to understanding more about this could be:

  1. Commitment – make a personal choice to begin resolving your difference and choose to connect in your relationships
  2. Develop Understanding – become curious about how to be objective about what is happening that is causing your anger.  A good rule of thumb is to view a situation as though seeing it through a video camera and describing this without blame and shame.  For example, “the room was dark and the table was at an angle that I did not see,”  versus, “you left the table in walkway and you turned the lights off, what did you think was going to happen!”
  3. Be Willing to Take Personal Responsibility – take time to explore what your feelings are  and know that these feelings are created by an unmet need you have.  What could needs be?  In the above example you may be feeling annoyed, hurt, and frustrated because you have a need for safety, trust and reassurance that if you walk through your family room in the dark you’re not going to walk into a table.

Having personal agreement to these first three points will give you incentive to  create opportunities for going beyond your differences in situations that typically create anger.  The next four steps are inner based self inquiry and actions steps to begin to practice the next time you notice your feelings of anger rising.

  1. Notice what you are telling yourself without judging yourself.  What stories are you putting to the situation.  In the above example it might be, “he/she always moves the table and never puts it back.  He doesn’t care about anyone but himself!” Or perhaps you are not comfortable with the idea of having needs and expressing them.  You may have been brought up to not have needs or may have them confused with ego thinking.  Simply notice and commit to moving forward with;
  2. Identify the emotions or feelings that are coming up.  Some of us will have a vocabulary of feelings and others will sense in terms of experiencing.  After choosing a few that are most alive move on to;
  3. Identifying what needs of yours that may not be getting met.  This  step will begin to decrease the level of heat you are feeling and begin to let you connect to what’s underneath the surface of your reaction.
  4. Decide what you want.  Make this a clear and positive action request which will be easier to find agreement with.  You cannot come to agreements with statements of what you do not want.

Once you have stopped to check in and separate the enemy images to understand more objectively what has stimulated you, identified your feelings and needs that stimulated your feeling and come up with a clear positive request of what you do want,  the next stage is to deliver the message.  For on go to link:

The third part in becoming friendly with anger is being willing to connect 

The first part in becoming friendly with anger begins with understanding it’s function

– Anger usually covers up feelings that we want to protect.

For example if we are overlooked for a promotion at work deep down we may be feeling disappointed, hurt, and possibly annoyed and not ready to share this even with ourselves therefore what we might notice is anger.  Processing the news of not being chosen we may cycle into thinking in what could be called “enemy images, ”  to protect our feelings.  We begin to think about something being done to us, or begin thinking of ourselves as not being good enough.

– Anger indicates that something is happening that we are not in alignment with.  

For example,  a parent of two children may become angry witnessing one child dominate the other by acting in a bullying way.  This could be a trigger for the parent who reacts in anger to protect what is dangerous.   In this case the parent has a need for emotional and physical safety for both children.

#3 – Anger is to get us out of danger, fast!

Anger is an inherent human function to stimulate us into action.  Imagine the adrenaline that runs through your body when you get angry.  The next time you notice yourself becoming angry make a point of checking out how your muscles begin to respond, how you breath and the power you feel.  You need this to get yourselves and others out of danger.  If your child was crossing the street and a car was coming, this anger is useful for you to act immediately to get that child out-of-the-way of the car.

The second part is becoming friendly with anger is be willing to recognize your anger versus being angry  for more, go to  link 

Learning Tools – List of Needs (Values)

by Renee Lindstrom, GCFP @ Inside Awareness

2

Integration of Body, Mind & Spatial Awareness

Values – CONNECTING AND BUILDING A VOCABULARY     

  • Learning to identify the roots of one’s feelings

Go to Downloadable lists of Feelings words when needs are met & not met


cultivating awareness from the inside out

The intent of this article is in the context of how communication, movement and outside influences can support the decrease of anxiety, stress & fear.

  • Communication:  values & empathy integration in communication for transforming disconnection into connection
  • Movement: calming one’s nervous system
  • Outside Influences:  increasing levels of tolerance

Compatible posts of interest:

Find out more on how integrating the arts of movement, communication and space compliment your experience and encompasses a holistic approach to wellness.

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Renee Lindstrom, GCFP,
Feldenkrais® Practitioner since 2007, Value-Based Communication & Empathy Coach since 2004, Art of Placement  since 2000, Founder of Greater Victoria Peace & Intercultural Celebrations since 2010 & Greater Victoria Labyrinths since 2012, #yyj Peace Week Calendar Founder – 2014 & 2015