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Coping with passive aggression

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    Coping with passive aggression

    Those who cannot express negative emotions may engage in passive-aggressive behaviors that provide a means of redirecting their feelings.


    Many people are taught from a young age to suppress feelings commonly regarded as negative, such as anger, resentment, fear, and sorrow. Those who cannot or will not express these emotions tend to engage in passive-aggressive behaviors that provide them with a means of redirecting their feelings. Passive aggression can take many forms: People who feel guilty saying ?no? may continually break their promises because they couldn?t say no when they meant it. Others will substitute snide praise for a slur to distance themselves from the intense emotions they feel. More often than not, such behavior is a cry for help uttered by those in need of compassion and gentle guidance.

    When we recognize passive-aggressive patterns in the behavior of others, we should never allow ourselves to be drawn into a struggle for power. Passive aggression is most often wielded by those who feel powerless in the face of what they perceive as negative emotions because they hope to avoid confronting their true feelings. They feel they are in control because they do not display overt emotion and often cannot understand how they have alienated their peers. If someone close to us shows signs of frustration or annoyance but claims nothing is amiss, we can point out that their tone of voice or gestures are communicating a different message and invite them to confide in us. When we feel slighted by a backhanded compliment, it is important that we calmly explain how the jibe made us feel and why. And when an individual continually breaks their promises, we can help them understand that they are free to say no if they are unwilling to be of service.

    As you learn to detect passive aggression, you may be surprised to see a hint of it in yourself. Coping with the natural human tendency to veil intense emotions can be as simple as reminding yourself that expressing your true feelings is healthy. The emotions typically regarded as negative will frequently be those that inspire you to change yourself and your life for the better, whereas passive-aggressive behavior is a means of avoiding change. When you deal constructively with your feelings, you can put them behind you and move forward unencumbered by unexplored emotion.


    copied from my daily om


    :congratulatory: Clean & Sober since 13/01/2009 :congratulatory:

    Until one is committed there is always hesitant thoughts.
    I know enough to know that I don't know enough.

    This signature has been typed in front of a live studio audience.

    #2
    Coping with passive aggression

    Mario I recently read about supressed emotions and paraphrase some of it below:-

    There are 5 natural emotions GRIEF, ANGER, ENVY, FEAR & LOVE...

    When you express GRIEF it allows you to get rid of it, to deal with the loss you have experienced. It ok to feel sad, in fact its healthy, if grief is repeatedly repressed it turns into chronic depression which is a very unnatural emotion.

    ANGER is completely natural and allows us to say "no, thank you". It never has to be damaging to another. If you are allowed to express anger you move through it quick & learn skills of moving on and letting it go. However, continually repressed anger becomes rage again an unnatural emotion which has caused death & wars.

    ENVY is a natural emotion which makes you try harder & strive until you sucessed. Continually repressed it turns to jealousy
    which again causes death and war.

    FEAR
    - babies are born with two fears, fear of falling and fear of loud noises. All other fear is learned responses or taught behaviour. The purpose of natural fear is to build in a bit of caution which keeps us alive. However, repressed fear becomes panic
    a completely unnatural & destructive emotion.

    LOVE
    expressed & received is the most beautiful emotion of all as long as it is without limitation or condition. Yet conditional love warped by rules and regulations, restrictions, control and manipulation is unnatural and again incredibly destructive. Repressed love turns to possessiveness
    resulting in more killing and war.
    "In the depths of winter I finally learned there was in me an invincible summer ."
    AF - JAN 1st 2010
    NF - May 1996

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      #3
      Coping with passive aggression

      Mario, Thanks so much for posting this today. I know for myself this is an important issue I need to resolve in order to achieve and maintain quality sobriety.

      Thanks also, chill for your post. I will print these out for study.

      Thanks again
      HG
      AF 01/30/10

      Look Back & Thank God
      Look Forward & Trust God
      Look Around & Serve God
      Look Within & Find God

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        #4
        Coping with passive aggression

        wow thanks mario. it's important that we recognise how we assert ourselves and why. also if it is innapropriate to a situation. i am taking a passive agressive attitude with my mam at the moment. having sly digs for no reason but really its the resentment that she's left me. for example,this morning she mentioned two of her friends who live nearby her now in spain. i said "don't talk about them. i don't like them you'll spoil my good mood." passive aggressive and almost downright emotional blackmail because she is aware of my breakdown.

        i know a huge part of my addiction is down to bottling emotions up for months, years even at a time. to help with my addiction i have to start going over old ground and dealing with these emotions in therapy, then learn to cope with situations as and when they arise instead of stilfling it down and reaching for the bottle.

        thanks, great post as always friend xx
        The mind will intellectualize it, the heart will emotionalize it, yet the gut never lies.

        https://www.mywayout.org/community/f9/girly-wirly-s-toolbox-2-45452.html

        Comment


          #5
          Coping with passive aggression

          Chillgirl;912623 wrote: Mario I recently read about repressed emotions and paraphrase some of it below:-

          There are 5 natural emotions GRIEF, ANGER, ENVY, FEAR & LOVE...

          When you express GRIEF it allows you to get rid of it, to deal with the loss you have experienced. It ok to feel sad, in fact its healthy, if grief is repeatedly repressed it turns into chronic depression which is a very unnatural emotion.

          ANGER is completely natural and allows us to say "no, thank you". It never has to be damaging to another. If you are allowed to express anger you move through it quick & learn skills of moving on and letting it go. However, continually repressed anger becomes rage again an unnatural emotion which has caused death & wars.

          ENVY
          is a natural emotion which makes you try harder & strive until you succeed. Continually repressed it turns to jealousy
          which again causes death and war.

          FEAR
          - babies are born with two fears, fear of falling and fear of loud noises. All other fear is learned responses or taught behaviour. The purpose of natural fear is to build in a bit of caution which keeps us alive. However, repressed fear becomes panic
          a completely unnatural & destructive emotion.

          LOVE
          expressed & received is the most beautiful emotion of all as long as it is without limitation or condition. Yet conditional love warped by rules and regulations, restrictions, control and manipulation is unnatural and again incredibly destructive. Repressed love turns to possessiveness
          resulting in more killing and war.
          Brilliant chillgirl, i have followed your progress and you are really doing great, keep up the great work you are such an inspiration, you & mario.:goodjob:

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