Elisabeth C

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When expressing anger in our childhood was dangerous. If showing anger could further inflame an already abusive parent or sibling, we learned, for reasons of pure survival, to suppress it, to show no signs of it. Leaving this early conditioning unexplored in our adult years keeps us associating our expressed anger with danger, so that when things anger us we shut down our anger so quickly that we appear not to be angry.
Bringing Your Shadow Out of the Dark: Breaking Free from the Hidden Forces That Drive You
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