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Of Course You're Angry: A Guide to Dealing with the Emotions of Substance Abuse PDF

256 Pages·1997·0.58 MB·English
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Of Course You're Angry : A Guide to title: Dealing With the Emotions of Substance Abuse author: Rosellini, Gayle.; Worden, Mark. publisher: Hazelden Publishing isbn10 | asin: 1568381417 print isbn13: 9781568381411 ebook isbn13: 9780585156279 language: English Alcoholics--Family relationships, Anger, subject Alcoholics--Psychology. publication date: 1997 lcc: HV5132.R674 1997eb ddc: 362.292/3 Alcoholics--Family relationships, Anger, subject: Alcoholics--Psychology. Page i Of Course You're Angry A Guide to Dealing with the Emotions of Substance Abuse Second Edition By Gayle Rosellini & Mark Worden HAZELDEN INFORMATION & EDUCATIONAL SERVICES Page ii Hazelden Center City, Minnesota 55012-0176 1-800-328-0094 (Toll Free U.S., Canada, and the Virgin Islands) 1-651-213-4590 (24-hour Fax) http://www.Hazelden.org (World Wide Web site on Internet) © 1985, 1997 by Hazelden Foundation All rights reserved. First published 1985. Second Edition 1997 Printed in the United States of America. No portion of this publication may be reproduced in any manner without the written permission of the publisher Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Rosellini, Gayle. Of course you're angry: a guide to dealing with the emotions of substance abuse / by Gayle Rosellini & Mark Worden.rev. ed. p. cm. Includes index. ISBN 1-56838-141-7 1. AlcoholicsFamily relationships. 2. Anger. 3. Alcoholics Psychology. I. Worden, Mark. II. Title. HV5132.R674 1997 362.292 '3dc21 96-37533 CIP 02 01 00 99 6 5 4 Book design by Will H. Powers Cover design by David Spohn Typesetting by Stanton Publication Services, Inc. Editor's note All the stories in this book are based on actual experiences. All identifying information has been changed to protect the privacy of the people involved. Page iii Dedicated to the memory of Michelle Abdill and Roxanne Ellis Page v Contents 1. Anger and Recovery 1 2. In the Beginning, the Family Created Anger 13 3. Anger Styles I: To Feel or Not to Feel 23 4. Anger Styles II: Beyond Bad Temper 31 5. Anger Styles III: Nice People 48 6. Resentments 59 7. Conquering Our Common Conceits 72 8. The Ventilation Trap 85 9. Wrangling without Rancor 98 10. Beyond the Serenity Prayer 113 Index 125 About the Authors 131 Page 1 1 Anger and Recovery It's after midnight and Donna is furious. Why do I put up with it? Does anyone really need this torture? Why isn't Jim home yet? He left for his AA meeting at a quarter to eight. It's a quarter to one and he's still gone! The damn meeting only lasts an hour and a half Where is he? If he's in a tavern No, don't even think it. It's been a year. Jim's been sober a year. He wouldn't. He couldn't. Where is he? Crouched into a corner of the sofa, Donna huddles in an agony of fear, worry, and resentment. Questions swirl through her mind. Wasn't Jim's getting sober supposed to make everything better? Wasn't it supposed to be the start of a bright new life, a life unmarred by the turmoil and arguments of the old drinking days? Hadn't she gone to all those meetings and read all those books just like the counselor recommended? Hadn't she accepted the fact that substance abuse is a family disease; that, in her own way, she'd been just as sick as Jim? Hadn't she done her share, for God's sake, to patch together the shreds of a marriage slashed to pieces by too much drinking and too much gambling at the local casino? She herself hadn't been to the casino in a year. She'd given up bingo and video poker. That hadn't been easy. And when Page 2 she went to one of her Twelve Step meetings, she came straight home afterwards. Why couldn't Jim do the same? Where is he? If recovery was so wonderful, why was their marriage still awful? Why the pounding heart? the clenched jaws? the aching, crushing pressure in her chest every time Jim pulled another one of these stunts? Didn't he know what they did to her? No, he doesn't care what it does to me. He's too insensitive, too self- centered to care about my feelings. He'd never understand the depth of my fury. He just doesn't care. Donna groans audibly. She feels like she's going crazy. What's wrong with me? Why do I feel so much hatred? Why do I feel so much? Baffled, she looks down at her mug and sees the dregs of her coffee. Cold and bitter, she thinks. Very appropriate. Then she tries to shake off her venomous thoughts. Jim's sober. That's the important thing to remember. I have to concentrate on that. Sobriety comes first. That's what the counselors always say. Sobriety is the most important thing. But her anger remains: Yeah, Jim's sober. Big deal. Nothing else has changed. He's out doing his thing while I sit home, sick with worry. The memory of all those terrible nights stabs at her heart. Why don't I just get a divorce and be done with it? Jim doesn't care. Oh, he pretends to, but all he really cares about is himself Otherwise, he wouldn't treat me this way, would he? Would he? She wants to cry. How many times has she tried to solve these problems? But what can I do about it? I certainly can't let Jim know how I feel because if I do, if I lose control of my temper for one minute, everything will come pouring out in a roaring flood of anger, a torrent of pain, a relentless surge of savage and ugly resentment.

Description:
Though we may not like to admit it, all of us get angry. At times we feel irked, exasperated, irritated, resentful, even enraged. Anger is a normal and healthy human emotion; learning to acknowledge and express it appropriately, however, especially for those in early recovery, is another story. Firs
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