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Anger Management Counseling in Colorado

Browse support for emotional reactivity, frustration, and communication challenges while connecting with therapists across Colorado.

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Use the filter options to find available therapists by specialty, insurance, location and age group.

Appointments may be available in as little as 48 hours. Many major insurance plans accepted.

How Anger Can Affect Relationships & Emotional Regulation

Anger Management can affect emotional wellbeing, relationships, communication, confidence, routines, and the ability to feel emotionally present throughout daily life. Many individuals experience stress, emotional overwhelm, anxiety, frustration, exhaustion, avoidance behaviors, difficulty concentrating, or feeling disconnected from others while navigating challenges related to anger management.

Over time, these experiences may affect work, school, parenting, intimacy, emotional regulation, self-esteem, decision-making, and overall quality of life. Some individuals notice ongoing strain connected to burnout, family dynamics, major life transitions, identity concerns, health-related stress, or difficulty balancing personal responsibilities and emotional needs.

Therapists across Colorado provide support for anger management through approaches tailored to each individual’s experiences, goals, relationships, lifestyle, and emotional wellbeing.

How Therapy Can Help

Therapy can provide support, perspective, and practical tools for navigating challenges, improving emotional well-being, and building healthier patterns over time.

Better Understand Patterns & Behaviors

Therapy can help individuals recognize emotional patterns, thought processes, relationship dynamics, and behaviors that may be affecting daily life and overall well-being.

Develop Healthier Coping Strategies

Many people use therapy to build practical tools for managing stress, navigating challenges, improving communication, and responding to difficult situations more effectively.

Improve Emotional Awareness & Regulation

Therapy can support greater self-awareness, emotional balance, boundary-setting, and confidence in managing emotions across work, relationships, and everyday life.

Support Long-Term Personal Growth

In addition to addressing immediate concerns, therapy can help individuals strengthen resilience, improve self-understanding, and build healthier long-term habits and routines.

Evidence-Based Therapy Approaches for Anger Management

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) helps people identify unhelpful thought patterns, emotional responses, and behaviors while developing healthier coping strategies and practical tools for daily life. CBT is commonly used to support anxiety, depression, stress, relationship challenges, trauma-related concerns, and emotional regulation.

Learn more about Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) >

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) helps individuals strengthen emotional regulation, distress tolerance, mindfulness, and interpersonal communication skills. This structured, evidence-based approach is commonly used to support emotional balance, relationship challenges, and stress management.

Learn more about Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) >

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) focuses on mindfulness, emotional flexibility, and values-based decision-making. ACT helps people respond to difficult thoughts and emotions more effectively while building healthier patterns that support long-term well-being and personal growth.

Learn more about Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) >

Mindfulness-Based Therapy

Mindfulness-based approaches help individuals develop greater awareness of thoughts, emotions, physical sensations, and behavioral patterns without judgment. These techniques can support stress management, emotional regulation, self-awareness, and overall mental wellness.

Learn more about Mindfulness-Based Therapy >

Biofeedback

Biofeedback therapy helps individuals better understand how stress, emotions, and physical responses are connected. By tracking patterns such as breathing, heart rate, or muscle tension, therapy can support greater self-awareness, nervous system regulation, and long-term stress management.

Learn more about Biofeedback >

Frequently Asked Questions About Anger Management

Anger is a normal human emotion. Everyone experiences frustration, irritation, disappointment, resentment, or anger from time to time. However, when anger becomes difficult to manage, it can begin affecting relationships, work, decision-making, emotional well-being, and overall quality of life.

Therapy helps people better understand the factors contributing to their anger while developing healthier ways of responding to difficult situations, emotions, and stressors. Depending on a person's needs and goals, therapy may focus on emotional regulation, communication skills, stress management, conflict resolution, coping strategies, self-awareness, relationship concerns, or underlying mental health challenges.

Many people seek therapy because they find themselves reacting more intensely than they intend. Others struggle with frequent arguments, damaged relationships, emotional outbursts, irritability, or lingering resentment.

Therapy provides a supportive and nonjudgmental environment where individuals can explore these patterns and learn practical skills for responding more effectively.

The goal is not to eliminate anger. The goal is to develop healthier ways of understanding, expressing, and managing it.

Anger does not need to involve yelling, aggression, or explosive behavior to create problems.

For some individuals, anger appears as irritability, impatience, resentment, criticism, withdrawal, passive-aggressive behavior, or difficulty letting go of conflicts. Others experience intense emotional reactions that feel difficult to control in the moment.

Over time, unmanaged anger can affect relationships, family dynamics, work performance, communication, stress levels, and emotional well-being.

A useful question to consider is, "Has my anger started creating problems that are bigger than the situations triggering it?" If the answer feels significant, it may be worth exploring additional support.

Recognizing the impact of anger is often the first step toward creating meaningful change.

One of the most common misconceptions about anger is that anger itself is the problem.

In reality, anger is a normal emotion that serves an important purpose. It can signal that something feels unfair, threatening, frustrating, painful, or important. The challenge is not the presence of anger. The challenge is how anger is understood, expressed, and managed.

Another misunderstanding is that people who struggle with anger are simply choosing to overreact. In many cases, emotional reactions are influenced by stress, past experiences, learned behavior patterns, emotional regulation skills, communication habits, and other underlying factors.

People are also sometimes surprised to learn that anger often masks other emotions such as hurt, disappointment, fear, shame, sadness, or vulnerability. Understanding anger more accurately can help reduce self-judgment and create opportunities for healthier responses.

This is one of the most common concerns people bring to anger management therapy. Many individuals know exactly how they wish they had responded after a situation is over. The difficulty is accessing that perspective in the moment.

When emotions become highly activated, people often react quickly rather than responding thoughtfully. They may say things they do not fully mean, raise their voice, become defensive, act impulsively, or make decisions they later wish they had handled differently.

Afterward, feelings of guilt, embarrassment, frustration, or regret may follow. This cycle can be confusing because people often genuinely want to react differently. The issue is rarely a lack of caring. More often, it reflects difficulties with emotional regulation, coping skills, communication patterns, stress management, or habitual reactions that have developed over time.

Therapy can help individuals slow this cycle down and build healthier ways of responding during emotionally charged situations. Many people discover that change becomes possible once they better understand what is happening beneath the anger itself.

Feeling anger is a normal part of being human. Struggling to manage anger occurs when emotional reactions repeatedly create problems in relationships, work, family life, decision-making, or personal well-being.

A person can feel angry without losing control. Healthy anger may involve recognizing emotions, communicating concerns effectively, setting boundaries, solving problems, or expressing frustration in constructive ways.

Anger becomes more concerning when reactions are consistently disproportionate to the situation, difficult to control, harmful to relationships, or followed by regret and negative consequences.

The goal of anger management is not to eliminate anger. It is to increase the ability to respond intentionally rather than react impulsively. Understanding this distinction often helps people approach change with greater self-compassion and realism.

Yes. Many people successfully learn healthier ways to understand, express, and manage anger. Growth often involves increasing self-awareness, recognizing triggers, improving emotional regulation skills, strengthening communication, developing coping strategies, and practicing new ways of responding to stress and conflict.

For some individuals, this process also involves addressing underlying concerns such as anxiety, trauma, relationship difficulties, chronic stress, depression, or unresolved emotional experiences.

Meaningful change rarely happens overnight. However, many people experience significant improvements in relationships, emotional well-being, and daily functioning as they develop healthier patterns. Anger does not have to control a person's actions or define their relationships.

Yes. Online therapy can be an effective and accessible option for many individuals seeking support with anger management.

Virtual therapy may help people develop emotional regulation skills, improve communication, address triggers, practice coping strategies, and work through relationship concerns from the comfort of their own environment.

For many individuals, telehealth increases access to care while reducing barriers related to scheduling, transportation, or availability.

The appropriateness of online therapy depends on a person's needs, circumstances, and treatment goals. Many people find virtual therapy to be a practical and effective way to build healthier responses to anger.

A useful question to consider is, "Am I responding to anger in ways that are creating consequences I don't want?"

For some people, those consequences involve damaged relationships, workplace difficulties, frequent arguments, emotional exhaustion, or feelings of regret after conflicts.

Others seek support because they are tired of feeling reactive, overwhelmed, or stuck in patterns that are not producing the outcomes they want. You do not need to wait until anger creates a major crisis before seeking help.

Support can be valuable whenever anger is affecting relationships, emotional well-being, decision-making, daily functioning, or quality of life. Seeking support is not a sign that something is wrong with you. It is often a step toward developing healthier ways of handling one of the most common human emotions.

We Work With Your Insurance

Westside Behavioral Care works with many major insurance providers to help make therapy more accessible and affordable. Coverage for counseling may vary depending on your plan, therapist availability, and whether you are seeking virtual or in-person sessions.

You can filter therapists based on your plan to find covered care quickly.

Browse Therapists

View the full directory of therapists who meet your selected criteria, including those with availability beyond the soonest openings shown above.

Cecilia Thompson
Cecilia Thompson

Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist

5.0· 6 reviews
Soonest: 6/27/2026 at 6:00 AM

Cecilia uses personalized art therapy and other therapy modalities, helping teens and adults overcome anxiety, depression, and trauma through a mindful, holistic approach.


  • Anxiety, Depression, and Relationship Challenges
  • Self Pay, and more
  • In-Person · Centennial, CO 80111
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Dave Bakulski
Dave Bakulski

Licensed Professional Counselor

4.7· 13 reviews
Soonest: 6/30/2026 at 1:00 PM

Works with ages 19+ only.

Dave provides warm, empathic therapy, using CBT and EMDR to help adults navigate trauma and addiction through his client-centered and strength-based approach.


  • Anxiety, Depression, and EMDR
  • Aetna, Anthem, Cigna, Humana, Self Pay, United/Optum, and more
  • In-Person · Golden, CO 80401
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Jeff Nelson
Jeff Nelson

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

5.0· 8 reviews
Soonest: 7/1/2026 at 10:00 AM

Seeing patients over 18 years old.

Jeff provides empathetic online therapy for adults, specializing in addiction, ADHD, and LGBTQIA+ support to help clients navigate life’s challenges and rediscover their inner strengths.


  • Substance Use, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, and LGBTQIA+
  • Aetna, Cigna, Self Pay, United/Optum, and more
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Andrea Rotz
Andrea Rotz

Licensed Professional Counselor

5.0· 8 reviews
Soonest: 7/2/2026 at 9:45 AM

Andrea provides compassionate, holistic support for teens and adults managing anxiety and life transitions, using evidence-based tools to help her clients find hope and lasting balance.


  • Anxiety, Depression, and Mindfulness
  • Self Pay
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Andre’a Kirkland
Andre’a Kirkland

Licensed Professional Counselor

4.6· 5 reviews
Soonest: 7/8/2026 at 12:00 PM

Andre'a provides online therapy for adults and seniors, specializing in anxiety and trauma to help them overcome internal roadblocks and achieve lasting emotional well-being.


  • Anxiety, Depression, and Mindfulness
  • Aetna, Anthem, Cigna, Humana, Self Pay, United/Optum, and more
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Sara Forrest
Sara Forrest

Licensed Professional Counselor

Sara utilizes art therapy and ERP to help individuals ages 13 and up manage anxiety and OCD, providing a warm and empowering space for healing.


  • Anxiety, OCD, and Major Life Transitions
  • Self Pay
  • In-Person · Boulder, CO 80301
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Cody Fox
Cody Fox

Licensed Professional Counselor

Cody provides trauma-informed, evidence-based care for adults facing addiction and grief, helping his clients build an authentic life through a compassionate and collaborative approach.


  • Substance Use, Trauma, and Depression
  • Humana, Self Pay, and more
  • In-Person · Centennial, CO 80122
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Tee Solani
Tee Solani

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

5.0· 2 reviews

Tee uses a warm, solution-focused approach and CBT to help adults and young adults navigate depression and major life transitions by building on their unique personal strengths.


  • Depression, ADHD, and Adjustment Disorders
  • Aetna, United/Optum, and more
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Nancy Jamerson
Nancy Jamerson

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

Nancy provides compassionate, faith-based therapy for adults of all ages, utilizing an eclectic approach and CBT to guide clients through trauma, addiction, and major life transitions.


  • Trauma, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, and Faith-Based Individuals
  • Self Pay
  • In-Person · Aurora, CO 80011
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado

Need Help Finding the Right Therapist?

Searching for a therapist can sometimes feel overwhelming, especially when looking for support that feels comfortable and aligned with your needs. Our team can help answer questions, explain therapy options, and connect you with therapists based on preferences like communication style, areas of focus, scheduling, availability, and insurance coverage.