Anger is a misunderstood emotion. Society often paints it in a negative light. And there's a sense of shame attached to feeling angry.
But there are no wrong emotions. Every emotion provides us valuable information and guidance. [1/13]
Anger is our body's adaptive mechanism to make us aware and respond to an unmet need.
The need could be concrete β like a promotion, a relationship, or more money. Or it could be abstract β like the need to be understood, or the need to be respected.
An unmet need could also reflect a sense of injustice. Something is wrong, according to your values, and you need to make it right.
Anger acts as a stimulant. It causes a rise in dopamine levels, flushes the skin, and increases the heart rate.
An angry brain is similar to a brain on amphetamines. It is evolution's way of motivating and preparing us to protect ourselves.
Your anger is always justified β what you do with your anger is a different matter.
But since it's seen as a vice, most people don't know how to handle anger constructively β leading to destructive behavior.
When you don't allow yourself to feel the anger, you hurt yourself. Suppressed and stored up anger often manifests as sadness.
When you don't do anything with the anger, the unmet need feels unattainable, creating a sense of helplessness. And when you push the anger below your awareness, you'll also fail to make the connection between sadness and anger, thereby perpetuating the despair.
Otherwise, when we hold onto a lot of anger and don't know how to handle it properly, it is projected outwards onto other people through hostility. Instead of hurting ourselves with anger by feeling sad, we use the anger to hurt others.
Jealousy, violence, abuse, resentment, tantrums, stealing β these are all different forms of hostility that originate from unprocessed anger.
The obvious first step towards handling anger constructively is allowing yourself to feel your anger.
Understand you're not bad for feeling angry. As you become comfortable with feeling angry, you get better at locating the source of your anger.
A simple way to do this is to journal on the prompt β "What do you need?"
Once you have a sense of what you need, the constructive way to handle anger is assertiveness. Look at the anger for what it is, listen to what it is telling you to get, and think of a way to get what you want (ideally, by helping others get what they want).
Hostility originates from a mindset that views the world as a place where others must lose for you to win. When you understand that the world is not zero-sum and that no one owes you anything, you realize that you can get whatever you need by creating value.
A lot of the time, assertiveness is simply about communicating your boundaries or just asking for what you need.
All in all, look at anger as a good thing β it's a pathway to healthier relationships and a more fulfilled life.
Every Sunday, I send out an email that breaks down some aspect of the human mind.
A sub-5-minute read that will help you develop a deeper understanding of your psyche.
How Meditation Alters the Brain (ππππππ)
Here's how meditation changes the brain β structurally and functionally
For a long time, I dismissed meditation as spiritual woo-woo.
How could closing your eyes and focusing on your breathe or thoughts or whatever make any difference?
To my "rational" (and ignorant) mind, it made no sense.
Sometime last year, I read up on the science of meditation. And it made me feel stupid for ignoring it all these years.
So for over a year, I've meditated almost daily. I'm not going to talk about the (life-changing) benefits I've experienced. Because your mileage may vary.