Read Keeping Your Cool…When Your Anger Is Hot!: Practical Steps to Temper Fiery Emotions Online
Authors: June Hunt
You will find it helpful to think through
in advance
the appropriate, productive response when your emotions get hot.
An appropriate action
is to cautiously express your thoughts and feelings with understanding and concern for the other person’s welfare. Proverbs 17:27 says,
“
A man of knowledge uses words with restraint, and a man of understanding is even-tempered
.”An inappropriate reaction
is to express your thoughts and feelings in such a way they stir up anger in others and produce strife. Proverbs 30:33 paints this graphic picture:
“
As churning the milk produces butter, and as twisting the nose produces blood, so stirring up anger produces strife.”
• Examine your motivation.
• Be realistic in your expectations.
• Know what you want to accomplish.
• Assess the legitimacy of your request.
• Rehearse how you will approach the subject.
• Anticipate possible reactions from the other person.
• Think through how you might respond to those reactions.
• Decide if you are willing to live with any negative repercussions.
• Talk with a wise and trusted person if you are uncertain what to do.
• Select a time and place convenient for both of you; find an atmosphere conducive for listening and sharing.
• Meet on “neutral turf” so both of you are likely to feel equal in power and importance.
• Allot sufficient time to address both of your concerns.
• Commit the time to God and seek His wisdom and understanding.
• Communicate your desires for open and honest communication and resolution.
• Express your pain and anger in a loving, nonaccusatory way without criticizing the person’s character, utilizing the “sandwich technique” (see pages 82-83).
• Evaluate the willingness of the other person to receive your rebuke without becoming angry or defensive and to understand your hurt, fear, frustration, or indignation over an injustice.
• Give opportunity for a response without interruption or defensiveness on your part.
• Affirm what is being said by repeating and clarifying spoken statements.
• Request any desired changes in behavior you believe will resolve the present problem and prevent future problems.
• Agree to change any problematic behavior on your part.
• Promote fairness and objectivity, openness and optimism.
• Extend total forgiveness unreservedly and willingly.
• Value differences in goals, desires, and priorities.
• Applaud the person’s willingness to listen to you, to resolve the problem, and to work toward improving your relationship.
“Suppose one of you wants to build a tower.
Will he not first sit down and estimate the cost to see
if he has enough money to complete it?…
Or suppose a king is about to go to war against another king.
Will he not first sit down and consider whether
he is able with ten thousand men to oppose the one coming
against him with twenty thousand?”(LUKE 14:28,31).
Firebreak: Preparing a Line of DefenseWhen you drive through forested areas, you may notice what appear to be lines or dirt-strewn scars stretching up a mountainside. These are likely firebreaks, man-made swaths of terrain where trees and vegetation have been cleared to help with fire containment.Especially in hilly or mountainous areas, wide paths are cut through brush with a tractor, bulldozer, or other ground-moving equipment. These bare strips of land create an area with no brush and thus no “fuel” for a fire. If a wildfire were to rage through the area, hopefully it would burn out at the firebreak rather than move forward. Firebreaks also allow firefighting equipment and vehicles easier access to the fire itself.
Sometimes when I see these breaks snaking up a mountainside, I think,
What tremendous effort that must have taken!
I imagine heavy machinery and crews with chainsaws plodding through the forest. But surely, when a forest fire roars to life, everyone in the area is grateful beyond words for the firebreaks. Such foresight and planning was very wise!
So it is with our anger. By choosing ahead of time to act rather than react, we are establishing a firebreak—a cooling-off space—that ensures our heated emotions don’t spread too far, too fast. Determine to do the hard work in advance so you have a line of defense ready when a blaze erupts.