This study is an effect study on the effects of anger expression during the behavior of crisis adolescents, after utilizing visual mandala art therapy and storytelling program of symbolic language. While talking about Mandara stories, teenagers are now expressing themselves naturally and accurately in the process of expressing their feelings. These teens express their uncomfortable repressed emotions in mandala colors, and when they are angry, they study how they express and control their feelings of behavior. Teenagers expressed their anger as they talked about the mandala storytelling and perceived the behavior as negative. As a result of this study, it is more positive to describe one s feelings as a story in venting one s anger at a crisis in the first place into action. Second, there should be a speaker who listens to the emotional stability and control of the crisis youth. In the process of self-interest, people who listen to their Mandara storytelling and give maximum support and empathy, and collaborators play a big role. Third, a crisis teenager who has come to recognize confusion in the current uncomfortable emotional environment expresses his insecurity by avoiding it and counter-reflecting it This reflects the emotional state that young people want to appear more stable in their inner function. The study suggested that although crisis adolescents use the mandala storytelling program to express anger, they can fully recognize their emotions and self-regulate and use them as a healing tool.