
Anger Is Not the Problem
How many of us grew up hearing:
“Weak people get angry.”
“Don’t get angry, get even.”
“Ladies never lose their temper.”
And so we learned something dangerous:
That anger itself is the problem.
So instead of understanding it…
We suppress it.
We judge it.
We hide it.
Yet anger is not always a flaw.
Sometimes anger is the signal that:
A boundary has been crossed.
Your truth has been dismissed.
Your worth has been challenged.
Respect has been withheld.
Anger can be valid.
The real question is not whether you feel anger.
The real question is:
What do you do with it?
Because suppressed anger does not disappear.
It often becomes:
Resentment.
Shame.
Regret.
Guilt.
Passive aggression.
Self-sabotage.
A quiet bitterness no one sees.
Suppressed anger does not mean you do not get angry...
It often manifests in a different way.
Read that again.
If you believe anger makes you weak, every time you feel it, you weaken yourself.
If you believe revenge gives you power, you remain tied to the very thing that hurt you.
If you believe you must always stay pleasant, you may betray yourself to be accepted.
This is where responsibility begins.
Ask yourself:
What in me feels denied?
What boundary have I ignored?
What truth have I not spoken?
Where have I waited for others to validate what I should know about myself?
Because when you know your worth internally, anger no longer needs to fight for it externally.
You can speak firmly.
You can act clearly.
You can respond without destruction.
That is power.
Not the absence of anger - the mastery of it.











