Talk to the school counsellor if your child is having
difficulties controlling anger at school.
If you have
difficulty controlling your anger, contact the therapists of AFCC today.
Do you feel stressed, depressed, anxious, have difficulty coping with work or home, marital issues, physical / emotion abuse or trauma,
difficulty controlling anger, divorce, or family problems.
Research indicates that depressed mothers, especially when their depression is chronic, are less sensitive with their infants and toddlers, play with and talk to their children less, and provide less supportive and age - appropriate limit setting and discipline than non-depressed mothers.4, 8,9 When mothers report more chronic depressive symptoms, their children are more likely to evidence insecure attachment relationships with them, show less advanced language and cognitive development, be less cooperative, and have more
difficulty controlling anger and aggression.8, 9 Lower levels of maternal sensitivity and engagement explain some of these findings.
Children of depressed mother are more likely to 1) express negative affect, 2) have
difficulty controlling their anger, 3) have an insecure attachment, 4) have poorer interpersonal skills, and 5) experience an elevated stress level.
inappropriate, intense anger or
difficulty controlling anger (e.g., frequent displays of temper, constant anger, recurrent physical fights)
Not exact matches
Mothers with BPD, for instance, are characteristically volatile and have
difficulty controlling intense, inappropriate
anger that is often precipitated by environmental changes and / or intense abandonment fears (APA, 2000; Paris, 1999).
«If you: - struggle with depression,
anger, anxiety, unworthiness or fear; - feel like an «imposter» even though you're successful; - judge yourself mercilessly; - have
difficulty controlling your eating, drug / alcohol use or spending; - would like to fill the emptiness inside through spirituality / meditation - I CAN HELP YOU.
Children with this condition may dislike physical affection, have
anger and
control issues, and experience
difficulty showing affection.
Some common behavioral manifestations are feeling sad / depressed, fear / anxiety, attachment issues,
difficulty at bedtime and / or falling / staying asleep,
anger / impulse
control, defiance, a significant change in school performance, expressed illness without a known medical cause, loss of interest in previously enjoyed activities and isolation.»
Impulse
control difficulties (DERS 3) were strongly correlated with the fear of
Anger (0.61), and the fear of Positive Affect (0.65).