CALM: Cultivating Awareness, Learning, and Mastery to Reduce Anger and Violence Through Combat Sports
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Developing CALM: A Combat Sports-Based Approach to Reducing Anger and Violence
2.1. Emotion Regulation and Competitive Contexts
2.2. Addressing the Mechanism: The Case for Emotion and Mood
2.3. Model of Emotion Regulation, Combat Sport Participation, and Reduced Violent Behavior
- Combat Sport Participation → Emotional Learning → Improved Emotion Regulation
- 2.
- Improved Emotion Regulation → Regulated Anger
- 3.
- Regulated Anger → Reduced Incidence of Violent Behavior
2.4. Summary of Model Flow
- Combat sport participation provides emotional challenges in a controlled environment.
- Social learning through the observation of skilled fighters teaches emotional regulation strategies.
- Enhanced emotion regulation leads to regulated anger (i.e., using anger functionally rather than impulsively).
- Regulated anger reduces the likelihood of violent responses to provocation or stress.
3. Applying the COM-B Model to Increase Participation in Combat Sports
3.1. Capability
3.2. Opportunity
3.3. Motivation
3.4. Operationalizing the Strategy
4. Future Research
5. Limitations
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Lane, A.M. CALM: Cultivating Awareness, Learning, and Mastery to Reduce Anger and Violence Through Combat Sports. Youth 2025, 5, 45. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5020045
Lane AM. CALM: Cultivating Awareness, Learning, and Mastery to Reduce Anger and Violence Through Combat Sports. Youth. 2025; 5(2):45. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5020045
Chicago/Turabian StyleLane, Andrew M. 2025. "CALM: Cultivating Awareness, Learning, and Mastery to Reduce Anger and Violence Through Combat Sports" Youth 5, no. 2: 45. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5020045
APA StyleLane, A. M. (2025). CALM: Cultivating Awareness, Learning, and Mastery to Reduce Anger and Violence Through Combat Sports. Youth, 5(2), 45. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5020045