If you're mad as hell and not doing much about it, you're not alone. But stifling your anger (as so many of us do) only makes you more stressed. Learn how to harness that emotion and achieve a happier, calmer state of mind.
By:
Cara Birnbaum
When you hear the words "anger problem," you don’t think
of someone like Bethany. Actually, the 40-year-old sales analyst and mom
of one in Brooklyn, N.Y., says she rarely gets full-throttle angry.
Instead, she’ll spend weeks stewing over a self-entitled co-worker or
her own hatred of the gym. Nobody would know, though; she keeps it all
to herself.
Which is exactly the problem: not feeling anger—which is
hardwired into the human brain—but burying that useful emotional
response until it turns into a quiet simmering. While some women vent
and move on, many of us were taught to not make a scene. We’re
overworked, sleep-deprived,
always on call and generally cranky about it. And as anyone with a
social media account knows, we feel outraged daily—about GMOs, Common
Core, the Kardashians, you name it. In fact, “the modern, connected
lifestyle has put us in an almost constant state of tension,” says Ryan
Martin, PhD, chair of the psychology department at the University of
Wisconsin-Green Bay and founder of the blog All the Rage.
While you don’t want to explode, holding in the emotion could be just as bad for you. “Rumination is like
a ticking time bomb,” says Matthew J. Zawadzki, PhD, assistant
professor of psychological sciences at the University of California,
Merced. A paper he co-authored a few years ago suggested that simply
thinking about whatever pissed you off days, weeks, or even months
earlier jacks up your blood pressure and heart rate as much as the
original event did.
Whether you stew or rage, your anger is trying to tell you
something—about your life, mind, and body. Here’s how to use it as a
catalyst for change.
Fear factor
As bad as being peeved feels, it’s actually a protective
response to what usually starts out as fear or pain, explains Veronica
Rojas, MD, a psychiatrist and co-founder of the Mindfulness Forum of
Ridgewood in Ridgewood, N.J. Before you can even make sense of a threat,
your amygdala, the almond-shaped emotion center of the brain, triggers a
release of adrenaline and other stress hormones. Your energy surges as
your breathing quickens and your heart rate and blood pressure rise.
“Your face might flush, your thoughts narrow, and it’s very difficult to think about anything else for a few minutes,” says Dr. Rojas.
It takes several seconds for that initial
burst of fear or pain to become anger. As you start thinking things
through, your analytical prefrontal cortex—the brain’s chief decision
maker—contextualizes the threat: Why does she speak to me that
way? How am I still working at this crappy job? “That’s why we call
anger a secondary emotion,” explains Dr. Rojas. “It never occurs alone.”
It’s your brain’s way of jolting you out of a vulnerable place and into
self-protection mode.
Most of us stop short of putting on the boxing gloves. The
prefrontal cortex nips angry impulses in the bud. But if you constantly
tamp down your annoyance, those blood-pumping stress hormones can
remain elevated, says Dr. Rojas. This kind of prolonged stress leaves
you more prone to a host of illnesses and diseases, found 2012 research
from Carnegie Mellon University—partly by interfering with your immune
system’s ability to regulate inflammation throughout the body.
Short-term simmering all too often
becomes chronic: The higher your stress level, the more an otherwise
minor issue (like someone swiping your skinny latte) makes you
ready to burst into flames. Snapping—whether it’s at that coffee thief
or your vaccine-skipping friends— can worsen matters. “Anger is the most
viral emotion,” says Martin. It’s more contagious than joy and sadness,
according to a 2013 study that looked at social networks.
Brooding over your feelings may be no better: A study in
the Journal of Abnormal Psychology showed that rumination contributes to
depression and anxiety. When Dr. Rojas sees patients suffering from
either of the above, it often turns out to be rooted in years of anger.
The same can be true for high blood pressure, irritable bowel syndrome, headaches,
and a host of other chronic ailments, all of which can be exacerbated
by persistently high levels of stress hormones, says Mary Coussons-Read,
PhD, professor of psychology at the University of Colorado, Colorado
Springs. And, tellingly, married couples who regularly suppress anger
have a higher risk of premature death than those who express it,
according to University of Michigan research.
Of course, the news isn’t great for folks who repeatedly
lash out, either. Recent research in the European Heart Journal showed
that the risk of heart attack is nearly five times higher in the two hours after an angry outburst.
How to get mad
So what’s a ticked-off girl to do? Remember that
anger is a flashing sign telling you to address something. “Conflict is
healthy only if you try to figure out what’s wrong and do something
about it,” says Ernest Harburg, PhD, research scientist emeritus in
epidemiology and psychology at the University of Michigan. First,
though, take a moment to note the reaction: “If anger arises, observe
your bodily sensations without trying to push them away,” advises Susan
Smalley, PhD, professor emeritus of psychiatry and founder of the
Mindful Awareness Research Center at UCLA. Relax your shoulders and
breathe deeply so your stomach slowly rises and falls—all cues to
the mind that your body is calming down.
Leave the scene if you can, adds Gail Saltz, MD, a Health
contributing editor and clinical associate professor of psychiatry at
Weill Cornell Medical College in New York City: “It’s OK to say, ‘I
notice myself feeling pretty topped out. I want to be able to discuss
this logically, so I’m going to take a walk.’” Even ducking into the
ladies’ room gives you a few minutes to reset. For Dr. Rojas, running a
stream of water over one wrist does the trick. For Coussons-Read, it’s singing “Viva Las Vegas” in her head.
With calm should come the clarity needed to problem-solve, says Gretchen Rubin, best-selling author of The Happiness Project and Better Than Before.
“If you feel angry going to work every day,” she asks, “is it because
work seems meaningless? Because you can never get all your tasks done?
Or because you have a conflict with a co-worker?” They’re all legit
reasons—each with its own path to resolution.
Asking yourself questions like this may loosen anger’s
grip, letting you see events in context. “A common setup for anger is
not thinking about what the other person is going through,” says Alice
Domar, PhD, executive director of the Domar Center for Mind/Body Health
in Boston. Then you can get to constructive dialogue, which allows you
to avoid the feeling of powerlessness that can cause anxiety and
depression. It’s all about taking action—only not in anger this time.
Pre-anger is a thing. Here's how to diffuse it
The prickly, stressed-out state we’re often in
before an angry stimulus hits—what psychologists call “pre-anger”—is
important to manage to avoid full-on rage. These little steps will help
keep insignificant triggers from getting you worked up.
1. Hide the right 10 Facebook friends
You know—the ones forever posting crappy news you have no power to change. Get them off your feed for a month and see if you miss waking up to the angst.
You know—the ones forever posting crappy news you have no power to change. Get them off your feed for a month and see if you miss waking up to the angst.
2. Don't get hangry
A healthy carb with fiber combined with a little protein—like an apple and a cup of yogurt, or whole-wheat crackers with peanut butter—will help keep blood sugar and mood on an even keel.
A healthy carb with fiber combined with a little protein—like an apple and a cup of yogurt, or whole-wheat crackers with peanut butter—will help keep blood sugar and mood on an even keel.
3. Declutter your desk
No one is saying you have to go all Marie Kondo, “but many people feel calmer and more in control when their work and living spaces are tidy,” says happiness expert Gretchen Rubin.
No one is saying you have to go all Marie Kondo, “but many people feel calmer and more in control when their work and living spaces are tidy,” says happiness expert Gretchen Rubin.
4. Do one thing at a time
Studies show that multitasking makes us sloppy and less efficient. And as Ryan Martin, PhD, points out, it pretty much ensures you’ll feel constantly interrupted and snippy about it.
Studies show that multitasking makes us sloppy and less efficient. And as Ryan Martin, PhD, points out, it pretty much ensures you’ll feel constantly interrupted and snippy about it.
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