Boundaries: Recognizing Limits, Responding to Violations, and Repairing What Breaks 2 of 7

Boundaries: Recognizing Limits, Responding to Violations, and Repairing What Breaks 2 of 7

Series by Rochester Therapy Center

Post 2: Anger as Information

Why Anger Is Often a Sign a Boundary Has Been Violated

Anger is one of the most misunderstood emotions. Many people are taught to suppress it, explain it away, or feel ashamed of it.

Clinically, anger often serves an important purpose: it signals that something is not okay.

Anger frequently arises when:

  • a limit is ignored
  • autonomy is compromised
  • consent (emotional or practical) is bypassed
  • expectations are imposed rather than chosen

Rather than asking, “Why am I so angry?”, a more helpful question is:

“What boundary of mine may have been crossed or unprotected?”

How Games Distort the Signal

Communication games often cause people to doubt their anger:

  • minimization → “You’re overreacting.”
  • narrative confusion → “That’s not what happened.”
  • blame shifting → “This is your issue.”

When anger is argued away, the boundary violation deepens.

When anger is acknowledged and repaired, the boundary becomes visible and protectable.

Not all anger means someone else is wrong—but anger often means something needs attention.

Coming next: How do you tell whether anger points to a real boundary violation—or just momentary conflict?

 

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