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Anger

Understand your anger.
Regulate your reactions. Respond with intention.

Anger is a natural human emotion — but when it feels explosive, overwhelming, or hard to control, it can strain relationships, disrupt work, and leave you feeling ashamed or out of control. You may find yourself reacting in ways that don’t align with your values, or suppressing anger until it shows up in unhealthy ways. At Health Allies Counseling, we offer compassionate, evidence-based anger management therapy that helps adults understand where anger comes from, regulate their nervous systems, and respond more intentionally — without shame or judgment.

Our Approach to healing

Bridge In Forest

1

Understading anger

Anger itself is not the problem. It is often a signal that something important is happening — such as:
 

  • A boundary being crossed

  • Feeling unheard or invalidated

  • Experiencing injustice or unfairness

  • Feeling overwhelmed, stressed, or unsafe

  • Carrying unresolved hurt or trauma
     

Anger becomes difficult when it moves too quickly, feels out of proportion, or turns inward or outward in harmful ways.

2

How anger can show up

People experience and express anger differently. Common patterns include:

​

  • Explosive outbursts or yelling

  • Irritability or short temper

  • Passive-aggressive behavior

  • Suppressing anger until it builds up

  • Physical tension or agitation

  • Anger linked to anxiety, trauma, or burnout

  • Relationship conflict or distancing

  • Shame or regret after angry reactions
     

These patterns are often learned survival responses — not character flaws.

3

How therapy can help

At Health Allies Counseling, anger management therapy focuses on understanding, regulation, and choice. Our therapists help you:
 

  • Slow down reactive responses
    Learn nervous-system regulation tools to create space between feeling and action.

  • Identify triggers and patterns
    Understand what sets off anger and how it escalates.

  • Develop healthier expression
    Practice communicating anger clearly and safely instead of suppressing or exploding.

  • Address underlying emotions
    Explore the fear, grief, hurt, or shame that often lives beneath anger.

  • Strengthen boundaries and assertiveness
    Learn to express needs without aggression or withdrawal.

  • Repair relationships
    Support accountability, repair, and rebuilding trust when anger has caused harm.

Does this sound like you?

Find a therapist
that can help you with these concerns now

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