
You’re going to hear it said that anger is just “sadness’s bodyguard”— but I don’t believe that.
I believe that anger, while it frequently occurs alongside sadness, is its own thing— as real and valid and independent as any experience, emotional or otherwise.
Remember that anger evolved for a reason.
The cave-people who could get angry when other cave-people tried to encroach upon their territory and steal their mates and wooly mammoths and stuff, had a survival advantage over those cave-people who couldn’t.
Anger, evolutionarily speaking, gives us a rush of focus and energy to defend our territory.
Anger is important. Anger is valid. Anger matters.
It it sometimes the case that our anger in a specific situation is actually about a different situation, maybe from the past? Sure— but that doesn’t make it invalid.
The worst thing we can do for and with our anger is to dismiss it as nothing more than the “bodyguard” of another feeling.
Anger, properly understood and responsibly managed, can be one of our most important trauma recovery tools.
Of course, denied, disowned, misunderstood, and mismanaged, our anger can be as destructive to us as our abusers’ anger was back then.
That’s why it’s so important that we take time to understand, validate, and manage our anger— precisely so we DON’T become our abusers in how we react (instead of respond) to our anger.
Sometimes I get sh*t for being pro-anger— but I don’t know what to tell you. Anger is as important and valid as anything else we can experience.
Meeting our anger with denial or shame is psychologically and even physically harmful to us.
I recommend meeting anger just like we meet anything and everything else in trauma recovery: with compassion, patience, realism, and respect.
Experiencing anger doesn’t make you an “angry person.”
But denying and disowning your anger probably will.









