Anger Management therapists in Boston, England ENG, United Kingdom GB
Jill Deacon
Counsellor/Therapist, BSc and FdSc Person Centred Counselling. MBACP
Experiencing anger can be a normal healthy emotion. But it can cause problems if it becomes a default emotion or, the opposite, an emotion that is completely withheld and unexpressed.
Anger can cloud your ability to think clearly, make you act impulsively, make you physically or verbally aggressive and violent towards people or make you distance yourself from others. It can affect you, your family, personal and professional relationships.
Therapy can help with anger as it gives you a place where you won’t be judged and where you can express yourself fully. We would look at links and possible triggers, explore healthy ways to manage anger and find ways to overcome the default of overwhelming emotion, helping you experience life in a healthier way.
7 Years Experience
Joel Cantor, Weybridge Hypnotherapy & Mindfulness
Therapist, MCH, BSc(hons), SQHP
The anger response is a learned reaction - a bad habit that can be addressed using a combination of Hypnosis, Mindfulness and Psycho-sensory techniques.
Recent studies have shown that hypnosis and Mindfulness meditation in particular can provide a strategy for dealing effectively with the triggers that produce the anger response.
This combined approach means that the client will first be taught how to bring mindful attention to the negative thought patterns that lead to destructive actions. They will then be taught effective strategies for changing the negative response to a positive response,
12 Years Experience
Dr Grenville Major
Therapist, MBchB, MRCpsych, MSc psychological therapies
The goal of therapy is not to remove anger, like a surgical procedure might remove something bad, because you can't do that. Anger is something that is present in all of us. Rather the goal of therapy is to help you learn how to manage your anger so that you can use it productively. I would like to meet with you to see what can be done to help you. This will enable us to get to know each other and see if we can work together. It’s important for you to work with someone you trust and feel safe with.
43 Years Experience
Dr Aneliya Gonsard
Psychologist, DClinPscy, MSc, BA
Anger is an integral and important emotion. I believe it to be a myth that some people do not or should not get angry. Problems arise when we have not developed a healthy relationship to this particular emotional state. If angry feeling are denied and repressed, psychological difficulties of all kinds can occur. In other instances anger comes at us and at others like a tsunami - in the form of destructive aggression - towards self and/or others.
If any of this sounds familiar and you would like to access a space where you can think and talk about it further, please get in touch.
14 Years Experience
Dr Ian Anderson
Psychologist, Consultant Clinical Psychologist (HCPC registered), PhD, MSc, MSc, MSc, MA (Econ), BA (Econ) Hons
In my experience anger is not acontextual. The complexity of an individual's anger needs to be deconstructed and addressed. I design individual programs for individual problems.
44 Years Experience