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True Confessions Agony Aunt: I’m worried about my partner’s short temper

Woman worried about angry partner

Image: Getty, posed by models

My partner has a short temper and little things really get to him and eat away at him and he also doesn’t take criticism well. It scares and upsets me when he gets angry as I’m quite a placid person.

When he gets upset he lashes out and hits things, but he says he’d never hit me.

However, I’m worried his over-reactions will get worse with age — he’s 33. I’m concerned about how he’ll react when something really bad happens in his life as so far it’s just seemingly small things that frustrate and upset him like if we have an argument or he has a bad day at the office.

Is this just normal male testosterone behaviour and I’m overreacting or should I be worried? I love him and don’t want to leave him so how can I help him?

If his behaviour is frightening or disturbing you then you are not over reacting so you need to deal with this by talking to him about it while he is calm. Everyone feels their anger is justified when they’re actually angry and most people will realise if they have over reacted after the incident is over and they have calmed down.

But for some people anger can become a problem that needs to be addressed and anger management classes or techniques can be very useful. The first issue is his reaction when you bring the subject up — do so by approaching this as something which needs to be dealt with and be honest with being overly accusing or dramatic.

Something like “I know this is your way of dealing with things but it scares and upsets me so could we look at other ways of letting frustration out?” is a reasonable approach, but if he refuses to consider that or even gets angry at you for raising the subject then you are the only one who can decide whether you want to stay with someone who frightens you. That is no way to live.

On the other hand, if he understands why it upsets you even if he doesn’t mean to then there is a lot of help available. Most GPs can refer you as a couple for anger management and your support will encourage him to deal with it, especially once he takes the big step of acknowledging that he has a problem and is over reacting.

Anger is a very normal process that has helped humans evolve and adapt but problems occur if it isn’t managed in the right way. It is also a mixture of both emotional and physical changes which make a surge of energy go through the body as chemicals such as adrenaline are released.

Reacting to that by lashing out becomes the coping mechanism but some people find they have to lash out more and more and this is clearly your worry.

Anger management techniques help identify the situations which bring about those reactions and look at finding appropriate coping mechanisms, which will vary from person to person, but can include different ways of helping vent frustration and burn off feelings which are bottled up such as non-contact competitive sport, running, learning relaxation methods or even shouting and screaming in a place no-one else can hear you.

There are three aims here — your partner learning not to lose control in any situation, not to get angry over minor irritations and for you to stop feeling frightened of his behaviour. It doesn’t matter if he doesn’t scare you intentionally — if you’re frightened he has to stop and you can sort this out together if he agrees to deal with it.

This Friday, November the 25 is White Ribbon Day, the UN sanctioned day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women. On this day men are encouraged to swear an oath “Never to commit, excuse or remain silent about violence against women.”

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Your supermarket saviour

Mum supermarket shopping

Nowadays we are faced with so much choice at the supermarket that figuring out which products are healthier options can be bewildering.

Here at ‘Mums United’, we know that making healthier food choices needs to be practical for Australian families.

We busy Mums don’t have the time to examine the ingredients on every single product that gets thrown in the trolley, especially when you have restless kids in tow. Shopping can be stressful at the best of times.

This is why the Heart Foundation Tick can be our supermarket saviour.

The Tick allows you to quickly and easily spot which foods on the shelves are a healthier option. So it really is invaluable when you’re short on time! And you don’t need to understand all the details in the nutritional panel.

As Mums, we also need to know that we aren’t compromising when making these speedy choices. For the Tick to be a real saviour, we need to know that we can trust it.

And we can. For companies to earn the Tick, all foods must meet the Heart Foundation’s strict nutrition standards: no exceptions. If a product fails to meet the standards, it cannot enter the program.

These standards have strict criteria like limiting saturated fat, trans fat, salt and kilojoules and increasing levels of healthy nutrients like fibre and calcium.

Plus, all Tick approved foods are subject to random testing, so you can rest assured that they continue to meet our high standards.

But you may wonder where the money and resources to run a program like this comes from. Despite being a part of the Heart Foundation, the Tick does not rely on any public donations. Instead, all food companies which carry the Tick pay a licence fee. Every cent that comes into the Tick goes back into running the program. So it really does benefit all Australians!

By replacing your regular ingredients with Tick foods, you can make your family’s favourite meals healthier without changing the foods you like to eat.

Many of the products with the Tick are perfect for busy Mums because they are so quick and convenient to cook with – like frozen fish and veggies. And so you can feel confident you are feeding your family healthier choices even when you are short on time.

Indeed, the Tick is across such a wide range of foods, from ready meals and cooking sauces to fresh fruit and vegetables, that whether you’re a clueless cook or a Masterchef, you will find the foods you like to buy with the Tick.

Outside of mealtime, if snacking is an issue for you or your family, the Tick can also provide options for healthier snacking – from fresh fruit to plain nuts and cereal bars.

But we all know that there is one major deal breaker when it comes to putting food in our trolleys – value for money. So it’s great news that ALDI has become the first supermarket in Australia to earn the Tick on a wide range of their exclusive products, making healthier foods affordable for all Australian families.

So if you want to cut down on supermarket stress, make the Tick your secret weapon in the shopping aisles from today!

Video: Aldi gets the tick of approval.

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Princess Mary’s Australian visit

Danish Crown Princess Mary has charmed almost everyone she has met on her six-day tour of Australia with husband Crown Prince Frederik and their family.

So far, she has hitched up her skirt to ride a bike, taken in the scenes at Sculptures by the Sea at Bondi and participated in a cooking demonstration with chef Matt Moran.

The down-to-earth princess even took part in an impromptu news report that was taking place at an event she attended.

Click through the pictures of Crown Princess Mary’s top 10 Australian moments here followed by the video of her impromptu news report.

Crown Princess Mary meets Julia Gillard in Canberra.

Crown Princess Mary and Crown Prince Frederik at the Sculpture by the Sea exhibition.

Crown Princess Mary hitches up her skirt to test a bicycle display.

The pair walk through the gardens of Government House.

The pair take a boat ride on Sydney Harbour.

Crown Princess Mary is greeted by children at the Sofitel Wentworth.

The pair attend the Danish Ambassadors dinner at Doltone House.

Australia’s Governor General Quentin Bryce with Crown Princess Mary and her twins.

Matt Moran of Aria Resturant gives Crown Princess Mary a cooking demonstration.

Crown Princess Mary is shown the Radiation Oncology unit at Westmead Hospital.

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Lola’s Secret

Lola's Secret

Lola’s Secret by Monica McInerny, Penguin, $29.95.

Lola Quinlan’s 12-year-old great grand-daughter approvingly likens her to Lady Gaga; kitted out with panache in pink tights and leopard-print dress.

Family saga author Monica McInerney’s 84-year-old creation also loves the internet and slips in smiley emoticons on emails like they are going out of fashion.

Lola’s secret — a Christmas bash which backfires — spells out more life, love and laughter where best-selling The Alphabet Sisters left off.

McInerney’s cast of a thousand chatty voices are etched effortlessly and resonantly by the end of chapter two and have been described as “comfort reading” and “warm buttered toast”.

True, except McInerney’s painted protagonist is no pushover and there are no honey-dripped endings either.

This slice of life is crusty and tough, full of grains of truth: it is never too late to live, but you are never too old to learn.

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Matilda Is Missing

Matilda Is Missing

Matilda Is Missing by Caroline Overington, Bantam Australia, $32.95.

It sounds like it could be dry and grueling content — a novel about a custody fight for a little girl from a family torn apart by divorce.

Yet Matilda Is Missing is so much more than that. It is a gripping and emotional tale of love and marriage — and why we do it at all!

As the book’s description reads — “Garry Hartshorn and Softie Monaghan were never love’s young dream. Not even on their wedding day. But Softie’s body clock was ticking and Garry wanted children …”

This is a very familiar tale for thirtysomethings, as declining fertility is never far from the headlines these days.

It raises the uncomfortable question: do we always really marry for love? This story of what really goes on inside families and marriages is compelling.

Author Caroline Overington obviously draws on her experience as a columnist for The Australian and writes elegantly and with emotion about the complex and not always fair workings of the Family Court.

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Adventures in Correspondentland

Adventures in Correspondentland

Adventures in Correspondentland by Nick Bryant, Random House, $32.95.

For five years, until he hung up his headphones last month, Nick Bryant was the BBC’s man in Australia.

For 11 years prior to his posting Down Under, Bryant roamed the globe as a foreign correspondent.

His reflections on this time as a microphone-wielding witness to history form the backbone of this highly entertaining memoir.

With Bryant as our guide, we roam through the Troubles in Northern Ireland, relive the sensation that was the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, spend time with warlords in Afghanistan and visit Guantanamo Bay.

We revisit the horror of the Boxing Day tsunami, the terror of September 11 and the sideshow of the Clinton-Lewinsky scandal.

And then Bryant gets to Australia — where he casts the kind of insightful eye across our land that only a foreign, professional observer can.

It’s an armchair guide to modern realpolitik, told in an easy-to-digest style. A fast-paced read that gives a human face to the disasters, conflicts and major news events that have defined the last two decades.

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Tiger Men

Tiger Men

Tiger Men by Judy Nunn, Random House, $32.95.

Spanning 65 years of Tasmanian history from 1853 to 1918, actor and best-selling author Judy Nunn follows the fortunes of three disparate yet inexorably linked families in the sweeping saga Tiger Men.

Where the term used to describe the bounty hunters who hunted the Tasmanian tiger into extinction, in Judy’s writing it refers instead to the novel’s eponymous new barons of industry who pillage Van Diemen’s Land of its natural resources for their own gains.

At the opening of the book, the docks of Hobart Town are ruled by the roughest; jailors and convicts who arrived in chains.

The sealers and whalers have fished the seas dry and the indigenous population have been fatally transported to Bass Strait.

Progressively philanthropic colonists and do-good clergy will groom the city into sophistication and prosperity, triumphantly bathed in electric light and boasting running trams.

Nunn’s founding cast in book one, wealthy English wool merchant Silas Stanford, paddy-on-the-run Mick O’Callaghan and US political prisoner Jefferson Powell, set out on very different paths, but their labyrinthine families will collide and collude.

As books two and three unfold, their century-old politics are breached by new thinking generations.

“Don’t work for your money, marry it,” was the word on the Wapping slum streets and in the brothels in the days before penal reform, but when money still does not buy respect and acceptance, blackmail and bribery cannot keep love at bay.

The days of buying silence and aborting the fruits of infidelity must be replaced with burying hatchets, and acts of heroism and true love.

The advent of the telephone and the Turkey Trot dance heralds the newest brigade of young guns at war with the eye of the tiger clearly facing the enemy on a united front. An epic miniseries in the making?

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The Affair

The Affair

The Affair by Lee Child, Bantam Press, $32.95.

Jack Reacher fans are wildly possessive of him and there’s a guerrilla reader movement against casting Tom Cruise in the upcoming Reacher film.

Their passion prompted me to read my first Reacher novel, the 16th in the best-selling series. I got lucky with the chronology.

The Affair is set in March 1997, six months before the first Jack Reacher thriller, Killing Floor.

This prequel sees Reacher sent by the army to a small town in Mississippi to keep an eye on the local sheriff as she investigates the murder of a local woman.

The nearby army base is in lockdown and locals suspect it’s harbouring a killer. Reacher finds himself torn between his duty and his increasingly intimate relationship with Sheriff Elizabeth Devereaux, who’s more than capable of dealing with the manipulative defence force.

It’s easy to understand the attraction readers have for Jack Reacher, who does the right thing in the face of overwhelming opposition.

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The Year After

The Year After

The Year After by Martin Davies, Hodder &Stoughton, $32.99.

It’s 1919 and, still grimy with Flanders dust, Captain Tom Abbott returns to a strangely muted London.

Before the war, he’d vowed never to return to Devon and rose-scented Hannesford Court, the home of the charming Stansbury family.

Yet a yearning for music, noise and bustle draws him back. Life there before the war seemed golden, but was it really? And was there more to the two deaths on the estate than anyone knew?

The Year After is a country house mystery with historical and emotional depth.

Tom and the Stansbury’s poor cousin Anne Gregory, lead us through the dramas of a family whose careless arrogance and easy charm play havoc with each other’s lives, and those of their guests.

Martin Davies cleverly creates many Hannesford Courts; the one seen by innocent Tom and Anne in 1914, the one they re-examine from the perspective of 1919, and the Hannesford Court left in the wake of World War I.

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I Am Half Sick of Shadows

I Am Half Sick of Shadows

I Am Half Sick of Shadows by Alan Bradley, Orion, $32.99.

Flavia de Luce may be a delightful innocent, but she’s well acquainted with murder and easy in its company.

In her well-stocked chemistry laboratory in a wing of her crumbling family estate, neglected Flavia explores the fascinating world of poisons, while her older sisters read, flirt and think up new ways to torture her.

When the house is turned upside down by a film crew and a famous actress, Flavia’s scientific and investigative talents come into their own, and this 11-year-old girl steadily outpaces the local constabulary.

Will Flavia find out too late that murder is not a game? Clever Canadian writer Alan Bradley has created a fresh forensic scientist and investigator in young Flavia, and his world of snowy 1950s rural Britain is bittersweet.

I Am Half Sick of Shadows won’t demand too much of you, it’s an easy escape into the world of a crafty young eccentric and has lashings of charm.

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