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Originally Posted by Curmudgeon
It's not a matter of denying it. Emotions are neither right nor wrong, nor are they anything to be ashamed of. They simply are. However, they can be controlled and/or redirected. It simply takes a bit of practice and a different approach.
Here's an example. The mere sound of the ex's voice used to raise the hairs on the back of my neck and the anger was instantaneous. One day I simnply decided to take away her power and control over my emotions. I did it by redirecting the anger into mirth and relief. Everytime she pulled one of her stunts or blew up at me I'd smile because she'd given me yet another reason to be overjoyed I was no longer married to her.
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If you know exactly what the reason for the anger is, and have learned to identify it at an early stage then that's fine. The difficulty for women is that we're given messages throughout life that anger is ugly and unfeminine, and should therefore be suppressed at all costs. The upshot is that it often leaks out in various destructive ways.
Eating disorders, Pre-menstrual outbursts (which have a bizarre sort of social acceptability because whilst annoying, they're seen as being "typically" female, hormonal and irrational), guilt, depression, nagging, passive aggression. It sounds, from the little you've said about your ex, as if she was someone who never learned to understand and thereby manage her own anger.
I mentioned the "Dance of Anger" book, because it's aimed at helping women to understand their anger and identify it in the early stages. I agree that the re-channelling is a hugely important part of anger management, but it can be a big mistake to "get rid of" angry feelings before we've had a chance to pay proper attention to the clues and warning messages they're trying to give us...whether those are about other people, unhealthy situations or simply things we need to change about ourselves and our patterns of thinking.
If we don't "get" our own anger, we can often blame others rather unfairly for bringing it about instead of examining the ways that we, and our failure to resolve earlier conflicts, are responsible for them.