Current:Home > ScamsWomen are paying big money to scream, smash sticks in the woods. It's called a rage ritual. -Finovate
Women are paying big money to scream, smash sticks in the woods. It's called a rage ritual.
View
Date:2025-04-18 01:28:52
Kimberly Helmus still gets chills thinking about her first rage ritual.
Two-and-a-half years ago after her divorce, the cybersecurity engineer embarked on a retreat to Scotland with Mia Banducci − an author and self-described "Spiritual Fairy Godmother," better known online as Mia Magik.
As part of the retreat, Banducci held a rage ritual: a ceremony in which participants scream and beat large sticks on the ground in the woods. Participants are encouraged to think of people and experiences that have wronged them and to scream and swing the sticks for at least 20 minutes, or until they can no longer move their arms.
Rage rituals have garnered attention on TikTok, where they've resonated, particularly with women. In comments, women describe how moving it is to see other women embody their anger − an emotion experts say society often discourages women from expressing.
"There's no place where you can see women be able to be angry like that and it not be condemned," Helmus says. " 'She's just hormonal. She's just unhinged. She's just crazy. She's just on her period. She's just, whatever.' This was a place where you were, probably for the first time in a really, really long time, if ever, able to scream out loud things about how you felt."
What is a rage ritual?
Banducci has led rage rituals for several years and began doing them first for herself, then for friends and, eventually, as part of her days-long retreats, which include other activities and can range in price from around $2,000 to $4,000. Her one-day version, she says, costs $222 per ticket.
The process of a rage ritual is pretty simple. First, Banducci says, participants gather large sticks while conjuring to mind "every person who's ever crossed you, who's ever hurt you, who's ever ignored your boundaries or taken advantage of you or abused you in any way." After some warm-up breaths, the screaming and swinging begin. The ritual is held in the woods so participants can make noise without fear of bothering people nearby.
Banducci isn't the only person who leads events dealing with rage. Secret Sanctuary will host a "Sacred Rage Ceremony" in Alberta, Canada in July, and Jessica Ricchetti − an author and self-proclaimed mystic − will host a "Sacred Rage" women's retreat in North Carolina in June.
"When people do this and give themselves permission to release their anger, their capacity for joy actually expands," Banducci says. "They're able to feel more happiness and pleasure, and they go home to their families with more gratitude and ease and peace."
Unexpected feelings can also arise during a rage ritual.
Helmus, for instance, thought her first rage ritual would address anger she felt toward her ex-husband. Instead, she felt something much deeper: a grief she'd been holding onto since witnessing the death of a friend when she was 15.
"I remember it was a very kind of clear, light-switch moment where I was like, 'Oh, that's what this is about,' " she says. "So many times I think you can't really feel a lot of stuff until you work through it."
What do rage rooms have to do with sex?A whole lot, it turns out.
What does a therapist think of rage rituals?
Psychotherapist Stephanie Sarkis says people deal with anger in a variety of ways, and there isn't a once-size-fits-all solution to rage.
For some, rage is better handled with activating strategies, like hitting a punching bag or doing an intense workout. For others, soothing strategies, like deep breaths, slow walks or calm music, work better.
It's important to know how you best process anger before undergoing a rage ritual, Sarkis says.
"When you do something like that, it's important to know, does it exacerbate your anger or does it decrease it?" she says. "That's something that's on an individual basis. It depends on past experiences. It depends on your own make-up. It depends on just brain chemistry."
Still, Sarkis isn't against rage rituals. If they help you release anger, you can afford them and they're done safely, she doesn't see the harm.
"I'm for whatever works within someone's worldview, whatever works within their budget, whatever works within their own wellbeing and their own safety," she says. "We're very individual."
Why do rage rituals resonate with women in particular?
Rage rituals seem to have struck a chord particularly among women, who write in social media comments how moving it is to see women let out their anger.
"Why did I have an immediate visceral reaction and start crying?" one woman wrote. "I literally cried seeing this… I NEED this," another wrote. "As a now middle aged woman with even more rage, I need this!!" wrote another.
Sarkis says this isn't surprising. After all, women have been historically discouraged from embracing their right to feel angry, she says.
Banducci says that, while men are taught to suppress sadness, women are taught to suppress rage.
"It's like, 'Don't be a bitch' or 'don't be angry' or 'don't be aggressive' or 'don't stand up for yourself.' 'Don't protect your integrity.' 'Don't tell anyone that they don't have consent to touch your body or speak to you in a certain way,' " she says. "There are particular emotions that are accepted in the gender binary that we each need to feel. Men need to cry − and it's so healthy for men to cry − and women need to be able to get angry."
Justin Bieber broke down crying:Men should pay attention.
By the end of her first rage ritual, Helmus says, participants were covered in dirt and mud with bruises and cuts on their hands. Sticks were broken everywhere.
She says she got a lot from the experience and has done it twice since: "It's really a place where you can be this feral, wild woman and not be looked at, other than with love and acceptance and care."
veryGood! (8156)
Related
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Michael Strahan's 19-Year-Old Daughter Isabella Details Battle With Brain Cancer
- What is Hezbollah and what does Lebanon have to do with the Israel-Hamas war?
- The tribes wanted to promote their history. Removing William Penn’s statue wasn’t a priority
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Fantasia Barrino on her emotional journey back to 'Color Purple': 'I'm not the same woman'
- Nick Saban won seven national championships. Ranking them from best to worst
- Vivek Ramaswamy says he's running an America first campaign, urges Iowans to caucus for him to save Trump
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- The tribes wanted to promote their history. Removing William Penn’s statue wasn’t a priority
Ranking
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Alaska Airlines cancels all flights on the Boeing 737 Max 9 through Saturday
- Report: ESPN used fake names to secure Sports Emmys for ‘College GameDay’ on-air talent
- Summer House Trailer: See the Dramatic Moment Carl Radke Called Off Engagement to Lindsay Hubbard
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- Emmys will have reunions, recreations of shows like ‘Lucy,’ ‘Martin,’ ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ and ‘Thrones’
- Blinken sees a path to Gaza peace, reconstruction and regional security after his Mideast tour
- A British postal scandal ruined hundreds of lives. The government plans to try to right those wrongs
Recommendation
Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
Ranking NFL playoff teams by viability: Who's best positioned to reach Super Bowl 58?
Michael Strahan's 19-Year-Old Daughter Isabella Details Battle With Brain Cancer
Horoscopes Today, January 11, 2024
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
Trump speaks at closing arguments in New York fraud trial, disregarding limits
Study: Bottled water can contain up to 100 times more nanoplastic than previously believed
Ship in Gulf of Oman boarded by ‘unauthorized’ people as tensions are high across Mideast waterways