“…One interpretation of depression, in addition to its being a normal response to loss, is that it results from anger turned inward (Schless, Mendels, Kipperman, and Cochrane, 1974Knowles, 1981c, 1981d. Also, the evidence linking suppressed anger to health problems (Gentry, Chesney, Gary, Hall, and Harburg, 1982;Greer and Moms, 1975;Harburg, Kasl, Taber, and Cobb, 1969;Luborsky, Docherty, and Penick, 1973) supported the need to help clients acknowledge that they were angry and identify what the anger was about and what effect it was having in their body or in their relationships with others.…”