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Aubree Nichols's avatar

Julie you characterized the family dynamic that surrounds the “person of rage” so accurately. My spouse’s mother struggles with severe rage towards all of her family members and has her entire adult life. I have always been shocked at how she speaks to her adult children and spouse with such vehemence, saying things that my own parents would never say to me, and then the very next time she interacts with a family member there is never a mention of the awfulness that was spoken. Thankfully my spouse has broken the cycle within our own family by talking openly with our own children about the damage it has done to him, and how valuable open dialog and therapy are in repairing those verbal bruises; how important boundaries are in certain relationships, and how sometimes even distancing yourself physically from those people is all that you can do to protect yourself because, as you said, often no amount of confronting or intervention can change this person’s behavior. My heart goes out to all those who take those difficult steps to break the cycle of anger in a family unit and protect themselves and their children from the damage that it causes. ❤️

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Eleasha Thorpe's avatar

Three weeks ago I watched as my husband of 26 years was taken away in HANDCUFFS for attacking our 18 year old in anger!

Thank you for breaking a different kind of fourth wall. The kind where we are all pretending all is well when deep down inside it is not. This topic needs more exposure, so many of us are afraid that discussing it means we live with abuse all the time, but that is not the case. We have great lives that others envy, but simmering anger and rage is sprinkled throughout. I am still clinging to hope that we can fix this, but even if we can’t, I need to make sure I deal with my own simmering pot so that my kids have at least one truly safe parent.

Thank you so much for the linked article!

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