The Standard (St. Catharines)

Author sees lessons in Smith’s eruption

- ELLIE ELLIE@THESTAR.CA.

Dear Readers

Can anger ever be positive? Simple answer: Yes, when we learn to own and conquer it within ourselves.

None of us are strangers to reacting negatively, whether it happened when feeling our parents didn’t understand us, or as adults having “a bad day.”

We witnessed that reality in the televised violent incident of actor Will Smith whacking comedian Chris Rock onstage during the 94th Academy Awards.

“Stuff was already going on inside him and untethered,” says Canadian clinical psychologi­st Monica Vermani.

Author the book “A Deeper Wellness: Conquering Stress, Mood, Anxiety and Traumas,” Vermani says that anger can take many forms, including an explosive reaction, like Smith’s.

Besides manifestin­g aggressive­ly and directly, anger can also be passive, even silent.

Despite the two-years-plus of anger endured when our lives were upended by lockdowns, home-schooling and social barriers, I found a recent chat with Vermani enlighteni­ng and hopeful. It takes learning to handle our own bad days, accepting those situations within our control and those outside of it, plus recognizin­g signs of rage and responding appropriat­ely.

A wellness coach and public speaker, Vermani has a “dynamic range of techniques” that can help deal with relationsh­ip anger (the most common disorder), using psychother­apy/cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT), mindful meditation and more.

She believes that good mental health deserves the same time, attention, and effort also needed for our physical well-being. So how do we manage our own anger within relationsh­ips? By being responsive to what triggers us — for example, when our partner says certain words. Or when, growing up, our parents expected too much from us, and we felt we’d failed then, and can now.

Siblings also affect our anger reactions if, while young, we always felt the eldest child was treated as special, or the middle child acted out to get more notice, or the youngest child felt resentment, believing they can never catch up to the others.

We can all learn from an approach which starts with encouragem­ent to “work on our own wounds.”

Even with long friendship­s, we sometimes need to reassess and take charge of negative energy around us, especially if your life phase has shifted from the previous links.

Vermani learned this the hard way, when her father suffered a severe workplace accident. By age 15, she was working full-time in a department store after school, and had to adapt to her own life phases and intense studies in her field.

After years of learning to read people’s inner triggers, the incident at the Oscars was no surprise for this psychologi­st.

Smith’s wife, Jada Pinkett Smith, was sitting in front, her hair shaved due to alopecia, an autoimmune disease that results in hair loss.

When Rock referred to her jokingly, Smith laughed momentaril­y, then saw his wife make a face. “Something got brewed up in him, a need to step up, his insecuriti­es wrong but triggered,” and coming up like “old boulders” within. During the incident, the slap temporaril­y shut down the sound of the American broadcast. But later, Smith won the Oscar for Best Actor for his performanc­e in King Richard.

Anger is a “blanket word, as the stuff going on inside you, gets untethered.” Says Vermani, “You hurt others, but also hurt yourself.”

Her message of self-empowermen­t: It’s possible to change.

It only requires that you pause and reflect about what’s making you become reactive to others, and to ongoing situations.

Ellie’s tip of the day

We can be our own change-makers from angry reactors to past hurts to learning to heal our own wounds from the past.

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