Advice From A Behavioral Expert-Controlling Anger In Adults Might Help Abused Children
Advice From A Behavioral Expertâ
Controlling Anger In Adults Might Help Abused Children
By Shannon Hicks
Research shows that the average time a middle-aged man spends talking with his children each night is 37 seconds.
Less than a minute. About the length of a television commercial.
In his opening remarks for the Seventh Annual Child Abuse Prevention Conference, which was hosted by Danbury Hospital on May 5 and 6, James T. Reese, PhD, offered that startling statistic. Dr Reese offered two lectures for the hospital, the first of which, âSnowman Falls from The Sky Unassembled: The Challenge of Care Giving,â was featured during a dinner event on May 5 at The Inn at Ethan Allen. His second lecture, âAnti-Social Child: Predictors of Violence,â was delivered on Friday, May 6, during a full day of lectures at the hospital.
Dr Jack Fong, a Newtown resident and the chairman of the department of pediatrics at Danbury Hospital, introduced Dr Reese. The department of pediatrics was the sponsor of the conference.
âThere are more than one million cases of child abandonment and abuse in our country every year,â Dr Fong noted. âThatâs not a small number, yet we donât talk about it, and you donât see a lot of information about this in the [media].
âI think thatâs a shame. In one sense itâs one of our best-kept secrets,â he continued. âThere are professionals out there to help the children â to glue their broken hearts and to resuscitate their shattered lives â but to prevent child abuse we have to involve every citizen. To care about every child in the nation would make this a better place.
âIf we donât invest in our children, and do our best for othersâ children, weâll wake up one day and regret that,â he said.
Dr Reese injected passion and humor into a one-hour lecture on Thursday evening that combined elements of living a less stressful life with ideas on combating child abuse. The lecture also addressed the challenges faced by caregivers of abused children.
âItâs kind of a sad world, yet we can bring something good to it,â he said. âGod did not create junk. There is good to be found everywhere.â
Dr Reese is a veteran of the Vietnam war, a former FBI agent of 25 years, and an expert in stress management. When he retired from the FBI in 1995, he was the assistant unit chief of the Behavioral Science Unit at the FBI Academy â the unit featured in the Thomas Harris novel and subsequent feature film The Silence of The Lambs.
For 18 years Dr Reese taught stress management, criminology, abnormal psychology and profiling, and was adjunct faculty with the University of Virginia. Among his credits, he is board certified in domestic violence, stress management, school crisis response, emergency crisis response, traumatic stress, and forensic traumatology.
Today he is president of James T. Reese and Associates, an international behavioral sciences and management consulting firm headquartered in Lake Ridge, Va. In four years of contract work since 9/11, Dr Reese has decompressed more than 460 rescue workers coming off the World Trade Center site.
He also serves as the director of violence presentation for Crisis Care Network, Inc.
He knows stress, and how the human mind works, and how to make it work better.
Within his lecture, Dr Reese offered his six keys to stress-free living: Challenge, Courage, Change, Choice, Control, and Commitment.
The challenge, said Dr Reese, is to defeat child abuse and to create stronger laws.
Lifeâs challenges also include controlling our anger as adults.
âQuit taking things personally,â he said. âStop counting the items on the belt of the express lane at the supermarket. Get a life!
âStop getting angry at everything stupid that happens while youâre driving,â he continued, and this comment elicited a number of laughs and nodding heads from his audience. âWe get so upset over next to nothing. Stop it!â
When we let pressure and anger build up during the day, Dr Reese said, we tend to let the steam release once we have returned home. Taking anger out on our family while positing to care about someone else defeats the purpose of providing aid to someone else who is damaged by anger.
âYou store anger up inside you all day, and then you get home and all these little things that have built up come out on your wife and kids,â he said. âControl that anger.â
Dr Reeseâs definition of courage is having the ability to not conform. âDo what you believe in,â he said.
Change means redefining how one thinks and how one behaves.
âWe are the only animals that choose what we become,â he said in explaining his fourth point. âYou can help people who need care, but you canât truly do that by ignoring the people at home.â
Control of oneâs life happens when one faces the challenge of stress head-on.
âIf youâre not in control of your life, somebody else is. If you let the guy who cuts in front of you in traffic make you angry, and you canât do anything about that anger, then he â not you â is in control of your life at that moment,â said Dr Reese. âSometimes you just need to break stride, create a goal, and make your own choices.
âSometimes anger happens, but you need to be able to set that anger aside.â
Finally, commit to eradicate child abuse.
âThere is too much child abuse in this country. It takes too long to prosecute, and there are too many judiciary mistakes still being made,â he said. âThis is a commitment we have made to people who cannot help themselves.â
In taking care of children, adults need to work together.
âSnowmen donât fall from the sky with a carrot on their already-formed head,â he said. âIndividual snowflakes are weak. Theyâre hard to identify separately.
âBut when you put them together theyâre strong. They take a shape, and they hold that shape.â
In addition to Dr Reeseâs lecture the following morning, Fridayâs conference included a lecture on child protection laws by Carolyn Signorelli, Esq, assistant attorney general, State of Connecticut; âSexually Offending Roman Catholic Clergy: Contest and Understanding,â by Gerard J. McGlone, SJ, PhD, visiting professor of psychology at St Josephâs University; âKidâs Media: The Good, The Bad and The Just Plain Awfulâ by Mary E. Muscari, PhD, RN, CRNP, CS, professor of nursing at University of Scranton; âThe Clinicianâs Obligationâ by John M. Leventhal, MD, a professor of pediatrics at Yale University School of Medicine; and âThe Workings of a Multidisciplinary Team,â by the Yale Child Abuse Team.