1 Cor 13:4-5a, James 1:19-20 This message explores the issue of anger; love is not easily angered (or love is slow to anger). Love means we don't go there easily.
For example, you might write: "Sara's heart raced in her chest as she looked at her phone. She willed her hand to stop shaking as she slowly read the text again." Other physical effects of anger include pulsing or throbbing veins, a flushed face or neck, a dry mouth, or breathlessness.
Rage (also known as frenzy or fury) is intense, uncontrolled anger that is an increased stage of hostile response to a perceived egregious injury or injustice.
acrimony, animosity, annoyance, antagonism, blow up, cat fit, chagrin, choler, conniption, dander, disapprobation, displeasure, distemper, enmity, exasperation, fury, gall, hatred, hissy fit, huff, ill humor, ill temper, impatience, indignation, infuriation, irascibility, ire, irritability, irritation, mad, miff, ...
When experiencing or witnessing a betrayal, a hurt, an injustice or a loss –there is something worse than anger. In the words of Elie Wiesel: “The opposite of love is not hate, it's indifference. The opposite of art is not ugliness, it's indifference. The opposite of faith is not heresy, it's indifference.
There's a psychology behind why disappointment hurts more than anger. We never think of anger as a respectful emotion, it's the opposite of love and gratitude. However, receiving disappointment rather than anger leaves us feeling lost and childlike.
Generally, people tend to view anger as one of our strongest and most powerful emotions. Anger is a natural and "automatic" human response, and can in fact, serve to help protect us from harm. While angry behavior can be destructive, angry feelings themselves are merely a signal that we may need to do something.
Psychologists say that love is the strongest emotion. Humans experience a range of emotions from happiness to fear and anger with its strong dopamine response, but love is more profound, more intense, affecting behaviors, and life-changing.
Emotions are either strong or weak against each other – Happy beats Angry, Angry beats Sad, and Sad beats Happy.
Whereas anger can be constructive, rage tends to be destructive. Rage can also be more physical. As it's a very high level of anger, your adrenaline, amongst other brain chemicals, soars. So you can feel 'out of body', as if things are suddenly hyper clear and 3-D, and physically stronger than usual, even superhuman.
Anger is an emotion most of us feel from time to time, and like any other emotion, it can be healthy if it's an appropriate response to something. Mad is an adjective used to describe something that relates to, is characterized by, or derives from serious mental illness.
Raging anger may lead to physical abuse or violence. A person who doesn't control their temper can isolate themselves from family and friends. Some people who fly into rages have low self-esteem, and use their anger as a way to manipulate others and feel powerful.
You've experienced one or more toxic emotions. Anger, frustration, fear, guilt, bitterness, resentment, and sadness negatively impact you. Toxic emotions cause you mental and physical harm. Anger leads you to do or say things you'll regret later.
Crying is in fact a very common response to anger as anger is often the result of feelings of hurt or sadness,1 says Sabrina Romanoff, PsyD, a clinical psychologist and professor at Yeshiva University, New York City.
While fear leads us to feel vulnerable and not in control, anger can be energizing and empowering. As such, it can become the go-to reaction to experiencing fear. Unlike fear, it moves us toward the source of our anger.
Angry is strong against Sad and weak against Happy. It increases Attack but reduces Defense. Angry has three levels: Angry, Enraged, and Furious.
Anger is a completely normal, usually healthy, human emotion. But when it gets out of control and turns destructive, it can lead to problems—problems at work, in your personal relationships, and in the overall quality of your life.
Anger is a natural and mostly automatic response to pain of one form or another (physical or emotional). Anger can occur when people don't feel well, feel rejected, feel threatened, or experience some loss. The type of pain does not matter; the important thing is that the pain experienced is unpleasant.
A person or situation somehow makes us feel defeated or powerless, and reactively transforming these helpless feelings into anger instantly provides us with a heightened sense of control. . . . In a sense, [anger] is every bit as much a drug as alcohol or cocaine.
Not only does our brain secrete the analgesic-like norepinephrine when we're provoked, it also produces the amphetamine-like hormone epinephrine, which enables us to experience a surge of energy throughout our body—the adrenaline rush that many of my [own] clients have reported feeling during a sudden attack of anger.
How anger is expressed is an external issue that can affect others, including those who are close to us and who we love the most. Without control, anger can destroy our closest relationships.
Short-tempered is a more formal way of saying that someone gets angry easily. I found her to be rather short-tempered. People who argue and complain a lot could be described as cantankerous.