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      <b><font size="3" face="Helvetica, Arial">In the Valley of Darkness: When Anger Blinds 
      You</font></b>
<p></p>

<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">It is Wednesday afternoon and your entire 

  day has been disrupted by two unexpected meetings you have to attend. Your unread 

  e-mail messages pass the 50 mark. You have recently learned that a critical 

  deadline has been missed on a project that is due tomorrow. Your boss has just 

  hit you with another change in the program specifications negating two weeks 

  of work. You are getting more and more irritated. Anger is a very real emotion 

  in the workplace.</font></p>

      <p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2"><b>Acknowledge, don't hide.</b></font></p>

<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">When you are angry acknowledge it. The 

  feeling is probably legitimate and reasonable. Managing anger does not mean 

  ignoring it or pretending that it is another emotion all together. A common 

  but dangerous strategy used is to sublimate the feeling due to a sincere desire 

  to be positive, a team player. Submerging the anger can produce stress, sleep 

  disorders, and truly hateful destructive thoughts. How you deal with anger at 

  work says a lot about how successful you will be over time. Try these techniques 

  the next time you see red.</font></p>

<ol>

  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Take a time out. Strange as it may seem 

    anger is actually a choice. We choose how to respond to a given situation. 

    Allow some distance and time to pass before confronting the individual or 

    the situation that distressed you. This is an ideal opportunity to engage 

    in a physical activity (not throttling the offender) but taking a walk or 

    going to get coffee. This allows the adrenaline that was pumping to recede 

    and your shoulders to come back down.</font></li>

  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Think first before responding. Anger 

    can easily make you inflexible which hinders problem solving. Are you sure 

    that your way or interpretation is the only way? If you are inflexible, ask 

    yourself if you are fighting to keep control rather than for any other motivation. 

    The more flexible you are able to be in general, the easier it will be for 

    you to find options. Reducing the strong emotion allows you to identify whether 

    there is room to accommodate or compromise about the issue. Note that there 

    is a difference between anger and rage. It is almost impossible to think beyond 

    rage but it is very possible to think beyond anger.</font></li>

  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Watch your mouth. It is very tempting 

    to say hurtful things that will sour the workplace relationship. Similarly, 

    statements filled with extremes such as "you always", "it never", "it's impossible", 

    etc. slam the door on any negotiating opportunities. In anger you can steamroller 

    over the other person. Overpowering others is not easily forgotten or forgiven 

    and will come back to haunt you later. It is perfectly legitimate to say that 

    you are angry, displeased, or disturbed about a situation. Just do not follow 

    up with accusations or recriminations. That will not get you anywhere. Strive 

    to identify and use constructive language.</font></li>

  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Listen before reacting. Try not to tune 

    out as soon as words come your way that you do not want to hear. Listen to 

    the other point of view because it is possible that you do not have all the 

    information and your version or potential solution could be wrong. Try to 

    see the situation from their point of view Even though you may not end up 

    agreeing at least their point of view becomes more reasonable and from reason 

    can come positive outcomes. </font></li>

  <li><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">Don't sweat the little stuff. A colleague 

    of mine who fought in Vietnam says, "I have been shot at and missed." His 

    perspective is that we always have more little stuff than big stuff. So the 

    printer missed the three o'clock deadline, the answering machine broke, or 

    the supply you were waiting for is a day late. These are fairly minor. Step 

    outside and talk to a homeless person or to a single parent raising three 

    on very little income, or anybody with a chronic illness, that is big stuff. 

    Save your energy for the big things. A good question to ask yourself is, "What's 

    the worst that can happen?" And if the answer is not too much the situation 

    is probably not worth your anger and certainly not your rage.</font></li>

</ol>

<p><font face="Geneva, Arial" size="2">If handling anger and disappointment is 

  not getting any easier with age or experience maybe a sympathetic listener or 

  a professional counselor can be helpful. Talking it through will help you get 

  to the roots of the problem and help you learn to respond differently when a 

  similar situation arises in the future. </font> </p>

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