Anger is a constant companion in our lives—and it influences your behavior in ways you probably never imagined. Here are just 5 examples, all drawn from recent research: 1. People Really Do Associate ...
For any of us driving is routine until it isn’t. A missed signal, a slow merge, a perceived slight, and suddenly frustration flares. Anne O’Dwyer has spent her career studying how emotion and ...
In my previous post, I discussed how "hangry" and similar states aren't actually anger—they're frozen fight-or-flight responses, anxiety experienced as irritability. But that raises an obvious ...
New research published in the Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin provides evidence that holding a grudge is driven by ...
ScienceAlert on MSN
Venting doesn't reduce anger, but something else does, review finds
Venting when angry seems sensible. Conventional wisdom suggests that expressing anger can help us quell it, like releasing steam from a pressure cooker. But this common metaphor is misleading, ...
When a friend messes up—forgets a birthday, blows off plans or doesn't pull their weight—it's normal for you to feel angry and for them to feel guilty. And if they mess up again, it's tempting to ...
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