I love how every thread like this has a 6/10 chance of just being done and dusted just by the brilliance of the first post.lewism247 said:I don't break things but I do get mad, why you ask?
Simple, Adrenaline.
Destroying and punching stuff is actually a known way to release stress... That's why companies make those stress dolls that you can punch and squeeze.So don't rage out, it wont help you get rid of your anger and you'll just end up with broken stuff.
Ha ha thanks.LightningBanks said:I love how every thread like this has a 6/10 chance of just being done and dusted just by the brilliance of the first post.lewism247 said:I don't break things but I do get mad, why you ask?
Simple, Adrenaline.
But yeah, I think its the fact that the game makes you do tedious bits youve already done that ticks me off. YES IVE DONE THIS 5 MINUTE JUMP SEQUENCE 500 TIMES NOW, LET ME GET TO THE BOSS.
Or stuff like the controls failing. I press jump, guy doesent jump, guy dies. Be it controller failure, pressing failure or game failure, its still bloody annoying.
It would be nice if you provided some kind of link to papers of the studies you mentioned.THEAFRONINJA said:Yeah, ok, well, decades of studies contradicting this and several personal experiences regarding bottling up anger in both myself, my friends and even just acquaintances call bullshit on this. One study does not make fact. Anyone who's not a moron knows that bottling up rage is bad. And I never said imagining another as one beats up a pillow is good, I simply said that bottling up rage is unnatural and unhealthy.Wieke said:Let's get some science in this thread:
Does Venting Anger Feed or Extinguish the Flame? - Brad J. Bushma [https://illinois.edu/lb/files/2009/03/26/9293.pdf]
So don't rage out, it wont help you get rid of your anger and you'll just end up with broken stuff.Conclusion of that paper said:Catharsis theory predicts that venting anger should get rid of it and should therefore reduce subsequent aggression. The present findings, as well as previous findings, directly contradict catharsis theory (e.g., Bushman et al., 1999; Geen & Quanty, 1977). For reducing anger and aggression, the worst possible advice to give people is to tell them to imagine their provocateur?s face on a pillow or punching bag as they wallop it, yet this is precisely what many pop psychologists advise people to do. If followed, such advice will only make people angrier and more aggressive.
I think you're missing the point...Sean.Devlin said:[wiki]Catharsis is a term in dramatic art that describes the "emotional cleansing" sometimes depicted in a play as occurring for one or more of its characters, as well as the same phenomenon as (an intended) part of the audience?s experience. It describes an extreme change in emotion, occurring as the result of experiencing strong feelings of sorrow, fear, pity, or even resulting from much laughter. It has been described as a "purification" or a "purging" of such emotions.[1] More recently, such terms as restoration, renewal, and revitalization have been used when referencing the effect on members of the audience.[citation needed]WOPR said:alright in short-
Why do people rage about games or get mad and break things?
I mean seriously they're JUST GAMES, they have no value or impact on the real world (you know what I mean)and they're supposed to be fun... so why do some people get so mad over them that they act so poorly that 2 year olds say "grow up" I mean like, why do people get so mad about a GAAAAAAAAAAAAME that they'll break things for example.
anyone care to fill me in; because I'm starting to feel like the only mature gamer I know (...that I really KNOW; yeah I'm surrounded by ragers)
EDIT: People keep saying it's NOT immature to get frustrated; so allow me to reiterate.
It's not getting mad that I find horribly immature (although personally I find it a little childish; just a little) it's breaking things, letting loose and non-stop string of insults, yelling at the top of your lungs at the person RIGHT next to you, claiming the game sucks with no reason to say so (minus the fact that you lost at it) and just being a poor-sport over all; instead of saying like "Good game" and getting a handshake, I get "YOU CHEATED YOU DICK!" followed by one of my controllers being thrown out my window. (which for the record, I doubt killing someone in a racing game ABOUT KILLING OTHER RACERS is "cheating" ...it was F-Zero GX)
The Greek philosopher Aristotle was the first to use the term catharsis with reference to the emotions ? in his work Poetics. In that context, it refers to a sensation or literary effect that, ideally, would either be experienced by the characters in a play, or be wrought upon the audience at the conclusion of a tragedy; namely, the release of pent-up emotion or energy.[/wiki]
And why cry when reading a book? It's not real. Allow yourself to feel something once in a while, it's good for you.
Sorry for the late response.Straying Bullet said:You need anger management, if you learned your lesson or no. That's hilarious and fucked up.Leole said:I get SO FRUSTRATED and SOOO ANGRY (It was like, the hardest stunt, and I was missing JUST THAT one for the Stunt Trophy) that I use my PS3 Controller like a club, and smash my 26" Screen.
God that game was awesome - but I only ever had 1 person who I could play it with, everyone else just gave up after they died 5 times on each track. Sooo I kinda get how someone with poor anger management could rage in that situation: he probably was doing very well at dying before you helped him.WOPR said:it was F-Zero GX
I guess I'm not saying its okay to "bottle up", just that there are other (better) ways of dealing with it. Putting distance (physical or mental) between you and whatever caused the anger, letting it subside and then put it in the proper perspective. Going from feeling angry to not feeling angry doesn't require some sort of "cathartic release" in order to be healty now does it?THEAFRONINJA said:Most of the studies aren't online, they're in books and similar written records. I agree that taking a deep breath or whatever and calming yourself down is better if it's possible, but are you really saying that bottling anger up is ok? Really? I just don't understand, it's not even up for debate, anybody who's ever bottled anything up has had it come back on them negatively in some way. If not, then it simply hasn't happened yet. I've experienced it myself, I've seen plenty of others experience it. Even if there were absolutely no studies on it, it's just ridiculous to say that one can bottle up rage and suffer no negative effects, whether it's on their mental health, physical health or even if it just ends in them flipping out at someone later.Wieke said:It would be nice if you provided some kind of link to papers of the studies you mentioned.THEAFRONINJA said:Yeah, ok, well, decades of studies contradicting this and several personal experiences regarding bottling up anger in both myself, my friends and even just acquaintances call bullshit on this. One study does not make fact. Anyone who's not a moron knows that bottling up rage is bad. And I never said imagining another as one beats up a pillow is good, I simply said that bottling up rage is unnatural and unhealthy.Wieke said:Let's get some science in this thread:
Does Venting Anger Feed or Extinguish the Flame? - Brad J. Bushma [https://illinois.edu/lb/files/2009/03/26/9293.pdf]
So don't rage out, it wont help you get rid of your anger and you'll just end up with broken stuff.Conclusion of that paper said:Catharsis theory predicts that venting anger should get rid of it and should therefore reduce subsequent aggression. The present findings, as well as previous findings, directly contradict catharsis theory (e.g., Bushman et al., 1999; Geen & Quanty, 1977). For reducing anger and aggression, the worst possible advice to give people is to tell them to imagine their provocateur?s face on a pillow or punching bag as they wallop it, yet this is precisely what many pop psychologists advise people to do. If followed, such advice will only make people angrier and more aggressive.
Best thing to do (imho) is simply to try to calm yourself down. If you're not feeling angry, you aren't angry anymore, it won't "bottle up" somewhere in your brain.
Another study i found:
Catharsis, Agression, and Persuasive Influence: Self-Fulfilling or Self-Defeating Prohecies? [http://www-personal.umich.edu/~bbushman/bbs99.pdf] (This one actually claims that all you'll end up doing is maintaining your anger.)