Archive for August, 2009

Anger Management Techniques

Monday, August 31st, 2009
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By Mike Logan

Anger management techniques must be implemented in 1/18th second. That is about twice as fast as you can blink your eyes, which takes perhaps 1/10th second.

If that seems impossible to you, remember that you have done this hundreds of thousands of time, at least you have if you are my age, 59.

Breakdowns in our ability to manage the interior feeling part of our experience can be deadly, and are at best mean spirited.

So what techniques or tools does Mike the Counselor advocate to manage anger?

Well, knowledge is important, so there are definitely some didactic tools you need to be aware of.

Those might include the works of Albert Ellis, and his Rational Emotive Behavioral Therapy. Likewise, Aaron Beck, and his work called Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy. I use Doc Childre’s HeartMath with my court ordered anger management clients, and I am very partial to Les Fehmi’s Open Focus materials.

The later two are biofeedback tools. HeartMath is a tool that allows you to learn how to manage the time between your heart beats.

I also use the work of Paul Ekman on facial expressions. Ekman reports that facial expressions may play across our face in as little time as 1/25th second, and that all of us respond physiologically to facial expressions, especially contempt. He reports that the human response to contempt is cross cultural, so an aboriginal who has never seen TV would respond just as I would, who sees too much TV.

It is important to be able to listen effectively, and reflect back what you hear nonjudgementally. Often folks who are upset simply need to be heard, and if I do that, they will calm down.

Assertive communication, expressing preferences and being prepared for “no” is an incredibly important anger management tool.
Managing Emotions is Like Steering a Car
My anger management clients often think that they do not need the anger management techniques because they are seldom enraged.

I like to teach that if they are paying attention to their emotions like they steer a car, they can often handle an escalation of feelings just like they avoid a pothole on the street, with a minor correction of the vehicles position on the road.

The cognitive corollary would be to change the thought to change the feeling.

The HeartMath technique would be to move their attention from the external to the area around their heart, and to breath through that area, and ask the brain in the heart for its suggestion for handling that stress.

The Open Focus technique would involve imagining the volume of space around the thought which produces the feeling. In other words a narrow focus becomes a diffuse focus, which actually changes brain waves from beta (focused external awareness) to alpha brain waves (relaxed external focus). That process can happen at the frequency of brain waves which is in cycles per second.

John Gottman in his The Art and Science of Love workshop speaks to the need for couples to actually take their pulse and if their heart beat is over 100 beats per minute, which can happen in one heart beat, the husband and wife are to take 20 minute time outs, until their pulse rate returns to normal.

Perceptions
I also like to work with perceptual tools, in order to help my clients understand that the only place they can experience vision is in the visual cortex, which is inside the skull.

Think of it this way, the only place you can actually see this material is inside your head.

Same for the experience of sound. It is only a vibration at the ear drum, it becomes words and/or good-bad interpretations inside the skull, in Broca’s area.

Pressure (touch) is processed in the sensory motor cortex and taste at its areas on the tongue and in the brain.

Smell is a special case, and is processed in the limbic brain, which gives us one last chance to express disgust and spit out the poisoned or rotten food. (Do you remember smells from your Sunday afternoon dinners some decades later, or the smell of the perfume your first love wore? Ask the limbic brain why).

All of this discussion is to make sure that my clients understand they are responsible for the thoughts that bring their feelings, and that nothing external makes them feel angry.
Flow
In his book “FLOW”, written in 1993, Mihalyi Cziksentmihalyi, on page 28, speaks to the limits of human consciousness. He reports that the Central Nervous System is capable of processing seven bits of information at the same time, and the information that we process is all nonverbal, changes in sound, subtle body postures, changes in expression, ect. and that the shortest amount of time between one set of seven bits and the next set of seven bits is 1/18th of a second, which means that I can process 126 bits of sensory data every second.

Better have my anger management game plan in place.

Daybreak Counseling Service
www.daybreakservices.com

Anger Management Agency Adds Spanish Speaking Classes

Thursday, August 27th, 2009
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Daybreak Counseling Service has provided anger management education and anger management classes in the city of Los Angeles for over 7 years. The company is the most widely used source for court ordered and self-referred anger management clients in the city.

Daybreak Counseling Service provides anger management courses in Gardena, Van Nuys, Long Beach, Santa Monica and Pasadena.

Beginning September 1st 2009. Daybreak Counseling Service will offer anger management classes in the Spanish language in two of it locations. The Gardena and Pasadena sites will service the large Spanish speaking population located in Los Angeles County.

Daybreak Counseling Service
www.daybreakservices.com
www.linkedin.com/in/angryinla
www.twitter.com/angryinla
www.youtube.com/angryinla
310-995-1202

Visit www.facebook.com. Search for Daybreak Counseling Service and become a fan.

ANGER MANAGEMENT AND THE BLAME GAME

Friday, August 21st, 2009
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Who hasn’t played the “blame game?” We learn as children that if we are blamed for something we can say “Johnny did it” or “Mary made me do it”. We can simply cast the responsibility of our behavior onto another person. It often works and we get out of paying the consequences of our own behavior. Yes, it’s dishonest but we can learn at an early age that it works.

Unfortunately we can carry on this manipulation because of fear of reprisal. It is true that some parents enable this because their reaction to children’s mistakes is often exaggerated and unkind. This can actually encourage the blame game.

Many carry this behavior into adulthood. We have all met the person who blames, makes excuses and denies responsibility for both their words and deeds. This is a familiar dynamic in troubled relationships in the workplace and the home. Blamers are disrespected and can eventually bring about their own demise by their immature and manipulative behavior. You would be surprised at how many people are quick to say “I don’t need an anger management class. Its my wife or husband who has the problem.”

Familiar phrases:

• The traffic was so bad
• Jane forgot to tell me
• No one includes me
• If I had been better informed
• If he hadn’t opened his big mouth……
• I’m only human, just one person, not perfect
• Well – you do that too
• And on and on and on and on

What rings true in every excuse is the person’s refusal to be accountable for his own wrongdoings. It’s always the fault of someone or something else. Those who have to live or work with the “blamer” become tired of it and the result can lead to frustration, anger, mistrust or abandonment.

What blamers need to do is accept their vulnerability and understand that it is human to make mistakes. It doesn’t make one a bad person. The better choice is always to tell the truth and admit to whatever you did or said. People respond much better to this honesty and understand because they are human and make mistakes too.

This helps our relationships stay open, honest and mutually respectful.
It also helps our self-respect on our journey to maturity.

Daybreak Counseling Service
www.daybreakservices.com
www.linkedin.com/in/angryinla
www.twitter.com/angryinla
www.youtube.com/angryinla
310-995-1202

Visit www.facebook.com. Search for Daybreak Counseling Service and become a fan.

If there were no angry people.

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009
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As an owner of several anger management education centers I have dedicated the last 7 years in an effort to eradicate anger in L.A. If I can not eradicate it, I at least want to help people manage it.

I have known for sometime if I am successful in attaining my goal I am simultaneously putting myself out of business. The idea of such a noble sacrifice bodes well with my savior complex.

But what about my Los Angeles neighbors, am I systematically sending them to the unemployment line? With this thought in mind I developed a list of occupations and establishments that would cease to exist if my world wide domination over anger and aggression continues.

As the modern day urban poets, NWA would say F*** The Police. Well that is exactly what I would be doing if continue my quest of exorcizing Los Angeles of its angry demons. I would be responsible for putting L.A.’s brave and the boldest out of a job. Year to date Los Angeles Police Department has recorded 15,266 violent crimes. These crimes include homicide, rape, aggravated assault and robbery. In addition 7,761 incidents of child and spousal abuse have been recorded. Without anger what would the police do all day? No wonder Chief Bratton is getting out of town, it is because of me.

If there are no Police there are no Courts. The Los Angeles Superior Court is the umbrella for 47 local courts throughout the County. These courts stretch from the breezy beaches of Santa Monica to the dessert heat of Santa Clarita. Thousand of judges, public defenders, prosecutors, interpreters, and clerical staff owe there allegiance to L.A.’s angriest citizens. What gives me the right to steal the food out of the mouths of such dedicated court employees? The Los Angeles criminal, divorce and family attorney is on the verge of extinction and when scientists in our distant future excavate their remains they will track their demise back to me.

Tinsel town, the entertainment capitol of the world, Hollywood, your star is dimming. As your surly actors and hot-headed singers go the way of the pacifist, what will the world talk about? Can the paparazzi and tabloids live on a diet of sex tapes and leaked photos of Disney stars? TMZ and Perez Hilton, sorry I hardly new you, but the anger in the city of angels must be dispelled.

My list is far from exhaustive, I’ve fail to mention the doctors, pharmacists, social workers, psychologists, mediators, sports franchises that will suffer as the turn this town into the Shangri-La of the west coast.

So tell me are you safe? Does your job have any connection to Anger in L.A.?

Angry Repsonse leads to gun fire and death in San Gabriel Valley

Friday, August 14th, 2009
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gunValinda, California

On Thursday night, August 13th David Sua was on his way to dinner with his family when a stranger threw a beer can at his car. The Los Angeles County Sheriff Department says Mr. Sua stopped the car, got out and confronted the stranger. The two began to argue and the beer hurling stranger pulled a gun and shot Sua to death in front of his family. Seconds later the gunman turns the gun on himself in an act of suicide.

Those who are attend to anger management are often drawn to the class because of how their anger has effected someone else. On many occasions our anger has a detrimental and sometime deadly consequence to ourselves.

Some of the consequences we suffer because of our anger include:

Financial Loss, physical illness, mental illness, loss of personal relationships, low self esteem and damage to our reputations.

Daybreak Counseling Service
www.daybreakservices.com
www.linkedin.com/in/angryinla
www.twitter.com/angryinla
www.youtube.com/angryinla
310-995-1202

Visit www.facebook.com. Search for Daybreak Counseling Service and become a fan.

What you may not know about anger management classes in Los Angeles

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009
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As a consumer of anger management it is important to make informed and educated decisions. This article exposes the inner workings of the anger management industry in Los Angeles.

The first thing you need to know is anyone can teach anger management. Anger Management is not therapy, it teaches skills that help manage anger and rage, therefore one does not need to be licensed to provide the service. Anger management teachers in Los Angeles have a wide range of education and experience. Some have doctorate degrees while others may lack a high school diploma.

Anger Management classes are typically sought out by individuals or couples who are having problems managing their rage. The classes are predominately filled by men but a growing number of women are enrolling.

Many anger management participants are self-referred or asked to come by their human resources department, but the majority of clients are court ordered. Because there are no court approved anger management lists defendants are permitted to find their own classes. The Los Angeles Superior Court as well as the Los Angeles Probation Department does not monitor or endorse any particular anger management provider.

Anger management providers vary in what they charge their students. Class prices can range between $20 a session to $50 a session.

An anger management class size will typically not exceed 8-12 students, so if you find a good facilitator you have an opportunity to take part in some really interesting dialog. Don’t expect what you may have seen in the movie Anger Management staring Adam Sandler. The interaction between the clients and teacher is usually quite civil. On the other hand if you take a class in Los Angeles you may have an opportunity to sit in the same class with a sexy aspiring actress, high paid executive or court ordered gang member. The majority of clients are husbands and wives, students and freeway drivers trying to find way to deal with the unique stresses providing by the L.A. lifestyle.

Daybreak Counseling Service
www.daybreakservices.com

George Sodini- Anger Management or an Assylum

Thursday, August 6th, 2009
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George Sodini the disturbed middle age Pennsylvania man who killed 3 women and himself at an LA Fitness thought he had an anger management problem. It is most likely Mr. Sodini had a thinking problem, psychotic thinking that is.

Mr. Sodini posted a youtube video describing his efforts to control his emotions.

Geroge Sodini also kept a blog describing his life long failure to connect with women and his desire to end it all in a bloody shooting spree. The blog even talks of a Los Angeles vacation in 2008. Mr Sodini writes, ” I have extra money and enjoy traveling, too, wtih my 25-30 days of vacation. LA was the best! But going alone is not too fun.

Anger Management is not psyhcotherpay and it is definitely not aa intervention appropriate for the psychotic.

Anger Management classes are designed to teach a set of skills, such as communication and stress management. If you suffer from depression, suicidal or homicidal thoughts please contact a licensed therpaist for help.

Daybreak Counseling Sevice
www.daybreakservices.com

Pipe line Anger in the News -Hell hath no fury

Monday, August 3rd, 2009
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super glue

A married Wisconsin man who was also dating three women at the same time was busted by the ladies and subsequently tortured for his poor relationship skills.

When the three women found out they were all being cheated on by the same man, they devised a plan to trick the man into coming to a motel room, being bound and blindfolded, and given a massage.

Unfortunately this supposed massage turned into a torture game where the three women put Krazy Glue on his “sensitive parts,” says ABC News.

Therese Ziemann lured the man to the hotel and then cut off his underwear and texted the other women to join in. Michelle Belliveau and Wendy Sewell also participated.

Reports show that they asked the victim which woman he loved more, which one he wanted to grow old with, slapped him in the face and then said, “Can you handle that?”

The man was finally released after he started screaming, and police say the women fled with his cell phone, wallet and car.
And you wouldn’t believe how these women all became so close. The man’s wife found out about the “love quad” and notified the women about it. That’s ultimate female bonding if we’ve ever heard of it.

Daybreak Counseling Service
www.daybreakservices.com
www.linkedin.com/in/angryinla
www.twitter.com/angryinla
www.youtube.com/angryinla
310-995-1202

Visit www.facebook.com. Search for Daybreak Counseling

Anger Management Expert asked to write for LA Examiner online news

Saturday, August 1st, 2009
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The LA Examiner is a premiere on line source for Los Angeles news, events and attractions, real estate, shopping, and more. Find local top breaking news and perspectives by trusted local experts.

Shannon Munford the owner of Daybreak Counseling Service was recently awarded the opportunity to become the LA Examiner’s local beat writer on all things anger management.

His initial story is entitiled “What you may not know about anger management classes in Los Angeles”

The Anger Management LA Examiner page will provide information regarding anger management techniques anger management providers, and of course news on local celebrities and Los Angelinos loosing their cool.

Shannon Munford has worked with clients in the entertainment industry as well as corporate America. His work has been featured in the Daily Breeze Newspaper and he has appeared on national television shows such as MTV Real World Hollywood, Decision House and Oxygen’s Bad Girls Club.

Daybreak Counseling Service
www.daybreakservices.com
www.twitter.com/angryinla
www.youtube.com/angryinla
310-995-1202

Visit www.facebook.com.
Search for Daybreak Counseling Service and become a fan.

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