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KAT'S NEWSLETTER
February
The days are starting to get a little longer, but winter is still with us for some time, though the coldest and darkest parts have passed for the year. There is a push-pull we are all facing - the momentum building in us for Spring, in contrast to the hibernation we are still waking up from. This month I invite you to nurture yourself and your creations in a new way…
What do you do with Anger?
Generally, we are taught as a culture to calm or suppress our anger. And, there is definitely a time and place for this that is really important, especially if someone’s anger is risking the emotional or physical safety of a child, a partner, a friend, a lover or a stranger. But if we add complexity, when would another response to anger be more useful?
I have had a number of people brag to me about not ever getting angry. What if the real accomplishment is feeling anger through your body? We all get angry, but most of us haven’t learned how to really feel it. And, if we aren’t feeling it, we are missing out on a really valuable part of ourselves, our boundaries and our emotional range.
Anger is a really powerful force. Like bubbles in a bottle after it's been shaken, we need to learn how to harness the release of it. If we open the cap too quickly, there is an explosion. If we keep gathering bubbles or force, it will burst out of the container one way or another at ourselves, or others. But, if we allow it to open a bit again and again, it releases. It moves through us. It mobilizes us to take the action needed. Our actions can be fueled with possibility and creativity, instead of destruction.
What does it mean to stretch your tolerance for anger, beyond calming it?
How does anger squeeze out of you unexpectedly?
How do we learn how to get angry, to feel anger?
How do we use anger as fuel for possibility and creativity?
To feel anger, it requires a reverberation, a visceral response. This is why little kids bite, throw and hit things when they are angry. Hitting something, for example, helps move the emotion through. Yes hitting can be unsafe, and I am not advocating for people to harm one another but, I do want you to think about what kinesthetic tools can move anger?
We all need more ways and more practice to turn towards and feel our anger. How do you feel your anger viscerally? What do you use, that has reverberation?
One of the ways I feel my anger is through boxing. I intentionally use it to let anger reverberate through me. I also scream in the car, letting my vocal cords shake. Punch pillows. And, stomp around like a wrestler, growling.
Anger needs an edge, something to push up against to release. It needs resistance. It beckons for it. What will you give it? How will you practice anger?
OFFERINGS
One-Off Sessions
Reach out for a one-off session, if you want quickie support…on how to explore initial ways to viscerally feel your anger? Or help your kids feel anger?
Or… maybe you’re ready to expose another blindspot, get some fine tuning support or shift a pesky habit.
Connect to sign up and get the ZOOM link.
BUSINESS CORNERWhat areas do you need to fuel in your business? Could you use feeling your anger in some way to generate more energy to do this? Let’s start with what you are avoiding most, or what frustrates you most with your business. Could you use this as an edge, scream about it in your car, and then use the energy you create to get %@&*# done? What happens when you try a new approach to what is frustrating you? | FAMILY CORNERKids can be excellent little teachers around anger. If kids start doing something new, like punching, biting, throwing or having other aggressive behavior, it’s time to get curious. Has anything changed in their life recently? How do you respond to their anger? Do they have proactive ways of viscerally expressing anger? Do you? What happens when you try a new approach to anger, theirs and yours? |