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Anger is a completely normal, healthy human emotion. It tells us when someone crosses a boundary or when a situation is unjust. However, when anger becomes explosive, unpredictable, or your default reaction to minor stressors, it stops acting as a protective instinct and starts damaging your career, your health, and your relationships.
When clients realize their anger controls them, they often ask: “What is the absolute best therapy to fix this?” Because anger frequently acts as a secondary emotion—a shield covering deeper feelings of fear, shame, or sadness—the “best” approach depends on the root cause of your frustration. However, clinically speaking, a few highly effective therapeutic modalities consistently yield the best results for anger management.
Mental health professionals widely consider CBT the gold standard for treating anger issues. Anger rarely stems directly from the triggering event; it stems from the narrative you tell yourself about that event.
How it works: CBT helps you identify the cognitive distortions and rigid expectations fueling your rage. For example, if you believe people “always want to get you” or that others “must” always respect you, you will find reasons to be angry everywhere. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy teaches you to catch these thoughts in real-time, challenge their validity, and choose a more measured response.
If you find yourself having massive, disproportionate reactions to seemingly small annoyances, past experiences rather than present circumstances might drive your anger.
How it works: Psychodynamic therapy explores your history, often looking at childhood dynamics, past trauma, or unresolved grief. By untangling these deep-seated emotional knots, you stop projecting past pain onto present situations, which significantly reduces your baseline level of volatility.
Many people with anger issues try to forcefully suppress their rage, which usually creates a larger explosion later. ACT takes the opposite approach.
How it works: ACT uses mindfulness to help you accept your angry feelings without immediately acting on them. Instead of trying to “turn off” the anger, you learn to sit with the physical discomfort of the emotion while committing to actions that align with your core values—like choosing to walk away instead of yelling.
Anger rarely happens in a vacuum; its primary casualties usually include the people closest to us. If relationship dynamics specifically trigger your anger, individual therapy might only solve half the puzzle.
How it works: Engaging in marriage and couples counseling provides a safe, neutral space to improve communication. It helps both partners de-escalate conflicts, express underlying needs without hostility, and rebuild trust that past outbursts may have damaged.
No one-size-fits-all type of anger management exists, but you do not have to let a short fuse dictate the course of your life.
At Bedrock Psychology Group, we provide tailored anger management that gets to the root of your reactivity. We will work together to find the specific therapeutic approach that helps you regain control and respond to life’s challenges with clarity instead of rage.
Contact us today to schedule a complimentary introductory call and take the first step toward a calmer, more grounded life.
About the Author: Dr. Paul Losoff, PsyD is a Clinical Psychologist providing individual counseling in Northbrook, Illinois. He specializes in helping clients navigate anxiety, depression, burnout, and life transitions through evidence-based therapeutic practices.
