Lumen
Most of us learned pretty early that anger was a problem. Maybe you were told to calm down, stop overreacting, watch your tone, or keep the peace. So you swallowed it, turned it into jokes, aimed it at yourself, or let it build until it came out sideways. And for a while, that may have worked. You got through family dinners, stayed in relationships, avoided conflict, and kept other people comfortable. But there is a cost to treating anger like a flaw instead of a signal. In this episode of Lumen, hosts Christopher Mooney, LCSW and Kenyon Phillips, LMSW explore anger as information, not a character defect. Drawing from psychology, philosophy, body-based awareness, and Viktor Frankl’s idea of the space between stimulus and response, Christopher and Kenyon examine what anger is actually trying to tell us, why it often points to crossed boundaries, ignored needs, violated values, or unresolved fear and pain, and what happens when it goes underground. The conversation looks at resentment, anxiety, depression, self-criticism, chronic tension, cultural messages around gender and anger, and the difference between feeling angry and acting aggressively. The episode also offers a practical path toward working with anger more consciously: noticing it in the body, asking what it is pointing toward, separating the feeling from the reaction, choosing a proportionate response, and finding healthy ways to move that energy through. Anger doesn't have to mean exploding, disappearing, or becoming someone you don't want to be. It can be data. It can be direction. And it can be one of the clearest ways that the deeper self says, “Pay attention. Something important is happening.” To book a free consultation with Christopher, Kenyon, or the other providers at Lumen Therapy Collective, visit lumentherapycollective.com. Follow Lumen on Instagram: @lumen_therapy_collective Subscribe, share, and review Lumen on your favorite podcast platform! Lumen is for educational and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for therapy, diagnosis, or treatment. If you’re experiencing a mental health crisis, please contact local emergency services or a trusted mental health professional.
19 episodes
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