How Avoiding Anger Impacts Mental, Emotional, and Physical Health
While explosive anger gets a lot of attention, the quieter version — suppressed anger — can be just as harmful. Many people were taught to avoid anger altogether: to be “nice,” “easygoing,” or to “keep the peace.” Over time, this suppression doesn’t make the anger go away. It simply turns inward or leaks out in other ways.
What Is Suppressed Anger?
Suppressed anger is when we feel angry but push it down or deny it. We might:
- Pretend we’re not upset
- Avoid conflict at all costs
- Feel resentment but say nothing
- Say “It’s fine” when it’s really not
- Stay silent to avoid upsetting others
On the surface, it can look calm. But internally, this buildup can have a serious cost.
How It Shows Up
Even when it’s buried, anger still finds a way out. It may appear as:
- Chronic irritability
- Passive-aggressive comments
- Emotional numbness
- Anxiety or depression
- Physical symptoms like headaches, stomach issues, or fatigue
- Difficulty setting or maintaining boundaries
When anger doesn’t have a healthy outlet, it often shows up sideways — impacting our relationships, our mood, and our sense of self.
Why Do We Suppress Anger?
There are many reasons people learn to suppress anger:
- Fear of rejection or conflict
- Cultural or family messages (“Good people don’t get angry”)
- Past trauma that made anger feel unsafe
- Lack of role models who showed healthy anger
But suppressing anger doesn’t make us more peaceful — it disconnects us from our true feelings.
Healthy Expression Is the Goal
The aim isn’t to be more angry — it’s to be more honest, more regulated, and more connected to ourselves.
Ways to Begin Releasing Suppressed Anger
- Journaling or naming what you’re really feeling
- Talking with a therapist or trusted person
- Movement or physical release (boxing, dancing, etc.)
- Practicing assertiveness and boundary-setting
- Allowing yourself to feel without judgment
Final Thought
Anger, when expressed with care, can be a path to healing. It tells us when something isn’t right. Learning to acknowledge and release it can bring relief, self-trust, and deeper connection — both within ourselves and with others.
If you’re interested in going deeper, we’re currently offering a group therapy anger management workshop — feel free to reach out for more details!