A child learns that expressing anger is anti-social and may lead to punishment, while expressing sadness is pro-social and elicits care and attention. They strategically transmute their anger into sadness to get their needs met, a pattern that often continues into adulthood where people get sad instead of mad.
A book taught Shaka Senghor to see the inner child in his adversaries. This reframed their aggression not as a personal attack, but as an adult "temper tantrum" from an inability to articulate unhealed trauma. This perspective shift instantly changed his approach to resolving conflict.
Society often expects men to solve their own problems, leaving displays of sadness or vulnerability unanswered. The brain then performs an "inner alchemy," transmuting this despair into anger—a more motivating emotion for action. When working with angry men, the underlying issue is often unaddressed sadness.
A six-year-old explained she cries when angry because crying makes her sister comfort her, while anger makes everyone run away. This reveals a fundamental social dynamic: we learn to express sadness to draw people in, while suppressing anger to avoid pushing them away, which can create a disconnect from our true feelings.
The habit of emotional withholding isn't selective. When you consistently suppress feelings like sadness or anger, you also unintentionally stifle your ability to experience and express joy. Emotional health requires being open to the full spectrum of feelings, not just the negative ones.
Anger arises only when something you love has been threatened or hurt. By tracing anger back to the underlying love, you can dissolve the shame and fear associated with the emotion, transforming it into a tool for self-understanding and connection.
Tears are an evolutionary tool for those in a weaker position (less physically formidable, lower status). Crying signals to a more powerful person that they are either imposing a cost that is too high or delivering a benefit that is exceptionally valuable, serving as a potent negotiation tactic.
In a study where people could self-stimulate emotions, they chose anger. This suggests anger is not just a reaction but a preferred state because it replaces fear and uncertainty with a clear sense of righteousness and a simple path to action, even if destructive.
When women get angry and cry simultaneously, it reflects an internal conflict. The anger is a desire to impose costs on another person, but the tears signal that they are in a 'lower-leveraged' position and lack the perceived power to do so effectively. It's a blend of aggression and vulnerability.
A growing trend in psychology suggests relabeling emotions like anger as “unpleasant” rather than “negative.” This linguistic shift helps separate the aversive sensation from the emotion's potential long-term benefits or consequences, acknowledging that many difficult feelings have upsides.
Following Freud's observation, depression can be anger directed at oneself. This psychological defense mechanism occurs when expressing anger toward external figures (like abusers or authority) is too risky. The brain chooses despair and inaction as a safer alternative, leading to depressive symptoms.