PsychoSarah
Chaotic Neutral
Anger is a condition of the mind, chemistry in your brain. And yes, it does hurt, though it is a completely natural emotion that is necessary to be a functional human being. If we felt no anger, we would not react accordingly to injustices. It can be a cushion against fear that would otherwise overtake us. As much as we might dislike it, our negative emotions are just as important if not more important aspects of the human condition than positive emotions.
It is also needed to keep chemical balance in the brain. No matter how much we might like being happy, our brain simply can't maintain that emotion indefinitely, because the chemical connections that function to produce it wear out. This is actually, perhaps, most noticeable with sadness in a person without chronic depression; you can only be so sad for so long before the feeling fades. The emotion can certainly come back later, but there is only so long any emotional response beyond what is the norm for you can keep going before your mind returns to chemical equilibrium.
That is, of course, unless there is something wrong with your brain chemistry, such as with people with bipolar disorder or severe chronic depression. In the former, the brain is unable to maintain normal equilibrium, and thus jumps back and forth between extremes. In the latter, the ability for the brain to produce the chemicals associated with being energized and generally positive are inhibited, with a multitude of possible causes.
As it were, most people that seem to lash out at random are either under extreme stress or have a mental disorder, with the former being more common. You should never feel guilty just for feeling the emotion, as that just perpetuates more stress and makes the problem worse. People that do tend to lash out do need to find a means of either reducing the source of stress, or releasing it in a more productive way.
It is also needed to keep chemical balance in the brain. No matter how much we might like being happy, our brain simply can't maintain that emotion indefinitely, because the chemical connections that function to produce it wear out. This is actually, perhaps, most noticeable with sadness in a person without chronic depression; you can only be so sad for so long before the feeling fades. The emotion can certainly come back later, but there is only so long any emotional response beyond what is the norm for you can keep going before your mind returns to chemical equilibrium.
That is, of course, unless there is something wrong with your brain chemistry, such as with people with bipolar disorder or severe chronic depression. In the former, the brain is unable to maintain normal equilibrium, and thus jumps back and forth between extremes. In the latter, the ability for the brain to produce the chemicals associated with being energized and generally positive are inhibited, with a multitude of possible causes.
As it were, most people that seem to lash out at random are either under extreme stress or have a mental disorder, with the former being more common. You should never feel guilty just for feeling the emotion, as that just perpetuates more stress and makes the problem worse. People that do tend to lash out do need to find a means of either reducing the source of stress, or releasing it in a more productive way.
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