Coping Skills
Emotions
Myths
Anger Cues
Primary emotions
100

This coping skill involves physically removing yourself from a situation.

Walking away

100

These emotions signal things are not going according to our plans.

Negative emotions

100

Myth: Anger is inherited and cannot be changed.

Fact: Anger is a learned behavior. 

100

Examples of this type of cue include: increased heart rate, increased breathing, increased blood pressure, muscle tension, sweating, headaches, and shakiness.

Body Cues.

100

This primary emotion may make you blush or appear bashful.

Embarrassment.

200

This coping skill involves focusing on your inhales and exhales.

Deep Breathing/Counted Breathing/ Measured Breathing

200

These emotions signal things are going according to our plans.

Positive emotions.

200
Myth: Anger automatically leads to aggression.

Fact: Anger does not equal aggression. You decide how you act. 

200

Examples of this type of cue include: racing or rapid thoughts, blaming others, intense focus on the other person/situation, preoccupation with plans for revenge or getting even.

Thinking cues. 

200

This primary emotion may make you scream or take flight.

Fear.

300

This coping skill involves speaking with yourself in a good way.

Positive Self-Talk

300

A feeling that comes and goes.

Anger

300

Myth: You must be aggressive to get what you want.

Fact: aggression is not assertiveness. Assertiveness expresses anger in a respectful manner. 

300

Examples of this type of cue include: anxiety, edginess, tension, anger, impatience, intolerance, irritability, and grouchiness. 

Feeling cues.

300

This primary emotion may make you feel like crying.

Sadness.

400

This coping skill involves going to a safe and calm place in your mind.

Pleasant imagery/safe space

400

An attitude that is fixed, unchanging, and can grow worse overtime.

Hatred.

400

Myth: Venting anger is always desirable.

Fact: Expressing anger in aggressive ways reinforces aggressive behaviors. 

400

Examples of this type of cue include: clenched fists, pacing, staring, speaking sharply, yelling, not talking, hurting yourself or others, and breaking things.

Behavior/behavioral cues.

400

This primary emotion may make you doubt your value or make you feel as though you cannot hoist Thor's hammer.

Unworthy.

500

This coping skill involves working to decrease your muscle tension in stages.

Progressive muscle relaxation.

500

This behavior is an expression of anger which never resolves the core problem. (Hint it starts with A)

Aggression/aggressive/aggressive behavior

500

Myth: If you ignore your anger it will go away.

Fact: The problem is the problem, not your emotions about the problem. 

500

The four types of cues for anger. 

Body, Thoughts, Feelings, Behavior.

500

The four primary emotions behind anger are:

embarrassment, fear, sadness, unworthy/unworthiness