Brother can't control anger

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TemporaryCircumstances

Guest
#41
I agree with the poster who suggested that maybe the reason your parents don't punish him, is because they're fearful of him and his temper. There has to be a root cause for why he acts this way..
Well.... it started as me and him. No other siblings, and he was fine, the angel child.
Next came my step brother, he had anger issues and got suspended about 17 times in a year (no joke :/)
Approximately then is when my ten year old brother started acting out on anger.


So I have sneaking suspicion it may be because he say what my step brother was doing.
Up to then he only had me as an example. And let's be real here I'm a goodie two shoes. I don't do much wrong or to act out. So he never got to see someone misbehave as my step brother did.


It could also have been my father always telling us hurting people was the solution to our problems,
Or seeing how my father punished us (it was physical, just keep it at that)

So I guess I probably think it's one of those two
 
Aug 16, 2016
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#42
Unsure if anyone suggested this already but have you considered taking to a pastor to get him delivered from any demons that may be attached to him. Therapy is fine however if he's influenced by demonic spirits it won't help much. Considering you mentioned it's something he can't control there maybe a spirit that has control of him.
 
Feb 7, 2015
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#43
What helped me in my anger was being taught by an ex-Ranger my mother was dating, to become a superior fighter. He then taught me how to learn not to have to resort to using it.

It sounds contradictory, but it is a fantastic mental attitude to know you possess. "I don't have to, because I know I can."
 
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TemporaryCircumstances

Guest
#44
Unsure if anyone suggested this already but have you considered taking to a pastor to get him delivered from any demons that may be attached to him. Therapy is fine however if he's influenced by demonic spirits it won't help much. Considering you mentioned it's something he can't control there maybe a spirit that has control of him.
Um.... you mean sneaking around my parents to take him to a pastor I don't know (my pastor won't do that)?
That won't be easy... :/
 
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TemporaryCircumstances

Guest
#45
What helped me in my anger was being taught by an ex-Ranger my mother was dating, to become a superior fighter. He then taught me how to learn not to have to resort to using it.

It sounds contradictory, but it is a fantastic mental attitude to know you possess. "I don't have to, because I know I can."
Hmmm..... actually.... may not be a bad idea.
My step father could teach him,
My father taught me, but the only problem I see in that is my step father refuses to teach us kids unless all of us have put stuff straight at school (good grades) and aren't getting in trouble
 
Aug 16, 2016
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#46
Um.... you mean sneaking around my parents to take him to a pastor I don't know (my pastor won't do that)? That won't be easy... :/
Couldn't you tell that to your parents as a suggestion to help oppose to sneaking? Or do they have something against pastors?
 
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TemporaryCircumstances

Guest
#47
Couldn't you tell that to your parents as a suggestion to help oppose to sneaking? Or do they have something against pastors?
Um.... they are against religion
 

Socreta93

Senior Member
Jul 28, 2015
2,247
327
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#54
Does he like sports? Have him learn boxing, or MMA, Wrestling
 
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TemporaryCircumstances

Guest
#55
Does he like sports? Have him learn boxing, or MMA, Wrestling
He plays football (not this year, because he's gotten in trouble so much though)
Yeah, I'd just have to figure out how to get him into it
 
Mar 2, 2016
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#56
I think people get angry because they feel like they aren't being heard. They feel insignificant.... So they use healthy methods to get noticed, be heard, find significance etc.

chasing pain is the way to siphon that poison out of a person.
 
Mar 2, 2016
8,896
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#57
I think people get angry because they feel like they aren't being heard. They feel insignificant.... So they use healthy methods to get noticed, be heard, find significance etc.

chasing pain is the way to siphon that poison out of a person.
Sorry...should say unhealthy not healthy.
 

OneFaith

Senior Member
Sep 5, 2016
2,270
369
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#58
My 10 year old brother has had problems with anger for a few years now. He claims that he does not know why he hurts people (kids at school and teachers) and he can't control himself.

This is hard for me because

1) He is my brother I've known him since he was born and we have always been partners through it all and it's a little sad seeing him turn into well.... an awful person sometimes because of his anger

2) (please don't judge me I need to be honest) sometimes it bothers me a lot because when he doesn't something wrong, like this week he ran away, punched a kid, and laid on the floor and threw a fit at school, he never gets in trouble but when I do something such as get a B I'm grounded for a month and everything of mine is taken away


Do any of you have advice for how I could possibly get the feeling of jealousy from him not being punished out, and how to handle someone who can't handle their anger in the house?

(Yes, he is in therapy)
Yes, there are things you can do to help your brother...

1-Have a heart to heart with him when he is calm. Give him something to fidget with as you talk (a slinky, a rubix cube, pizza, just something).

2- Inspect the root cause. Did something get bottled up inside him? Make sure you have eye contact with him when you ask, and let him see the love and concern in your eyes.

(Never bottle things up for even a second. Smash the bottle, destroy the bottle, and confront problems immediately when they occur. Either change the situation, or accept that you can't change the situation. Either way it is put to rest so that you can move on. A reaction from a problem as big as a grain of sand will not be like the reaction from a mountain of a problem, but a mountain of bottled up sand will explode at a problem as big as one grain, and can be as severe as abuse or even murder. Never bottle things up- it just prolongs and intensifies your anger to an unhealthy extreme).

3- Come to a conclusion. Either he needs to forgive someone so that he can put it to rest, or he needs to admit that he is just easily angered.

4- Admitting the problem. You can go no further if he does not identify the problem. "Yes, I have a problem being easily angered, I don't know why."

5- Is it needed? There are times where controlled anger is needed- such as a husband whose wife is being harassed by another man. God gives us adrenaline to protect us when we or our loved ones are in a dangerous situation. Many things can spike our adrenaline, and we have to decide quickly if it is needed. Most of the time it's not, and you have to tell yourself "false alarm, calm down."

6- Want. If you recognize that your anger isn't needed, you have to genuinely want to change it.

7- Opposite. If you want an opposite result you have to do the opposite things. Changing your emotion from angry to calm and content does not happen as fast as flipping a light switch on and off the first time you try, but it is possible, and with practice it can happen more quickly. When you are angry you frown, you breathe faster, you wrinkle your eyebrows.

This is so important. Scientists proved that you make a facial expression before you feel the feeling. You can literally change the channel so-to-speak just by making a different facial expression. Relax your eyebrows and your mouth, and breathe in slow and deep through your nose.

It's sad, some people suffer from anger simply because that is the natural way their face is at rest and without provocation, and they don't understand why they are angry. Just like the opposite in dolphins- they always seem to be smiling, but that is just how their faces are. Those who have this problem need to stand in front of a mirror and practice facial expressions till they find one that makes them actually feel happy.

8- Change the subject. Think of a memory of something that made you laugh or feel good. Some call this "Going to your happy place" It is actually a great idea. Have a go-to memory/daydream/movie scene for times when you need to focus on the positive.

Anger is a very difficult emotion to overcome. But once you are able to do it, it will happen faster and faster until it becomes instant.

This has worked for me, and my daughter as well. Everyone gets angry, but you dont have to stay angry.
 
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TemporaryCircumstances

Guest
#59
Yes, there are things you can do to help your brother...

1-Have a heart to heart with him when he is calm. Give him something to fidget with as you talk (a slinky, a rubix cube, pizza, just something).

2- Inspect the root cause. Did something get bottled up inside him? Make sure you have eye contact with him when you ask, and let him see the love and concern in your eyes.

(Never bottle things up for even a second. Smash the bottle, destroy the bottle, and confront problems immediately when they occur. Either change the situation, or accept that you can't change the situation. Either way it is put to rest so that you can move on. A reaction from a problem as big as a grain of sand will not be like the reaction from a mountain of a problem, but a mountain of bottled up sand will explode at a problem as big as one grain, and can be as severe as abuse or even murder. Never bottle things up- it just prolongs and intensifies your anger to an unhealthy extreme).

3- Come to a conclusion. Either he needs to forgive someone so that he can put it to rest, or he needs to admit that he is just easily angered.

4- Admitting the problem. You can go no further if he does not identify the problem. "Yes, I have a problem being easily angered, I don't know why."

5- Is it needed? There are times where controlled anger is needed- such as a husband whose wife is being harassed by another man. God gives us adrenaline to protect us when we or our loved ones are in a dangerous situation. Many things can spike our adrenaline, and we have to decide quickly if it is needed. Most of the time it's not, and you have to tell yourself "false alarm, calm down."

6- Want. If you recognize that your anger isn't needed, you have to genuinely want to change it.

7- Opposite. If you want an opposite result you have to do the opposite things. Changing your emotion from angry to calm and content does not happen as fast as flipping a light switch on and off the first time you try, but it is possible, and with practice it can happen more quickly. When you are angry you frown, you breathe faster, you wrinkle your eyebrows.

This is so important. Scientists proved that you make a facial expression before you feel the feeling. You can literally change the channel so-to-speak just by making a different facial expression. Relax your eyebrows and your mouth, and breathe in slow and deep through your nose.

It's sad, some people suffer from anger simply because that is the natural way their face is at rest and without provocation, and they don't understand why they are angry. Just like the opposite in dolphins- they always seem to be smiling, but that is just how their faces are. Those who have this problem need to stand in front of a mirror and practice facial expressions till they find one that makes them actually feel happy.

8- Change the subject. Think of a memory of something that made you laugh or feel good. Some call this "Going to your happy place" It is actually a great idea. Have a go-to memory/daydream/movie scene for times when you need to focus on the positive.

Anger is a very difficult emotion to overcome. But once you are able to do it, it will happen faster and faster until it becomes instant.

This has worked for me, and my daughter as well. Everyone gets angry, but you dont have to stay angry.

Wow! Thank you so much!!
 

blue_ladybug

Senior Member
Feb 21, 2014
70,869
9,601
113
#60
Have him watch re-runs of Walker Texas Ranger. He'll learn martial arts real fast.. lol