We might be able to bash the bag and feel good about it afterward, but our anger will come up again unless we learn why that aggression is coming up in the first place, as JowGaWolf suggests.
In other words, when something happens to you, why do you react by feeling irritated? Why do you want to get angry? Why does that thing push your buttons? In my experience, I've found that we only get angry when we feel
threatened by something. As an example, a friend of mine is quite smart, but he grew up with people calling him "stupid" and shunning him. So, even though he has a successful career and a Masters' degree, he still gets angry if he thinks that someone is even suggesting that he may be "stupid," because that threatens his image of himself as a competent, intelligent person. Childhood training sticks with us.
As for its being part of your personality, psychology types might differ with you. They sees stable personality traits along five axes:
- openness to new ideas
- conscientiousness
- extraversion
- agreeableness
- neuroticism
(
Revised NEO Personality Inventory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia )
If your anger really were a stable personality trait, it would come under neuroticism in this model as "hostility," where you would be
generally hostile under most circumstances, or, well, hostile all the time. This can be looked at, but would probably require a lot of work, and maybe medication. I don't know. However, if you only become aggressive under
specific circumstances (say, if someone threatened your manhood), then this is something that can be worked with more easily, by looking at the situations that set you off, and dealing with the emotions and thoughts that come up as just that: emotions and thoughts ... stuff that might have helped us at one point but might not now. Yes, it's work, but I think it would be manageable.
I'd welcome the opinions of others on the board on this, but if things can set you off, martial arts might
not help you in that you might still be easily baited, or goaded into a fight. You want to be calm and cool so you can see things around you with equanimity: neither good nor bad, but simply there. In short, being blinded by anger is bad in martial arts. I don't know if that's where you are, but aggression can get a person into trouble.
(Disclaimer: This is strictly my opinion. I am not a licensed therapist, and my advice is not intended to replace or act as therapy delivered by a licensed practitioner.)