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Self Help
Coming on board with the great cultural shift for men
Men have emotions too, but what do they know about them? Making an honest assessment of how our actions have affected others |
A New Idea About Men's AngerMany men are trail-blazing a different lifestyle that is free of abusiveness and based on respect, trust and equality. They are learning and understanding the impact of the old rules about how men were supposed to be and calling into question that those old rules are helpful in developing caring and respectful relationships with others. Many men are ready to break with the traditions of the past and shake off the legacies that view men as bullies and to reclaim and pioneer a very genuine and liberated form of masculinity. In the early days of our work men talked a great deal about anger as the emotion they thought led to their violence. We often heard men say things like - ‘I lost control and hit her', ‘I blew my stack', or ‘I've got a short fuse.' If having an ‘anger problem' was the true explanation of our abuse we'd expect violence to erupt all over the place - in the streets, at the office, on the bus, in restaurants, wherever people are. Such public violence doesn't happen anywhere as often as private violence. Most abusive and violent behaviour occurs in our homes behind closed doors. Having a problem with anger isn’t
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‘Where a man’s sense of what he feels entitled to exceeds his sense of responsibility for the welfare of others, abuse is a natural outcome.’
- Alan Jenkins, Invitations to Responsibility
| Home Programme Design and Development |