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Chronological and reproductive age may significantly influence women's anger levels and their ability to manage them.
A new study finds that most forms of anger decline in women after age 50 due to emotional and hormonal changes during ...
Suppressed anger in the workplace Suppressing anger in the workplace can have a negative impact on advancement, effective collaboration, and even work satisfaction.
The researchers call for more research on anger and women as they age, especially given a seeming connection between suppressing anger long-term and cardiac issues such as blood pressure. Women feel ...
Suppressed anger is tied to higher cortisol, blood-pressure spikes, and tension headaches. Stress-related illnesses flourish when the fight-or-flight system never gets a clean release.
Because young children depend on caregivers for survival, they often suppress anger to preserve those essential bonds, even at the cost of emotional authenticity. Well-meaning parents may have ...
Only anger suppressed was not related to age. Similarly, reproductive-aging stages significantly affected anger, resulting in a decrease after the late-reproductive stages.
Suppressing anger means we often don't make the necessary changes to align our lives with what truly matters to us, leading to ongoing suffering and frustration.
Those who suppressed their anger were nearly three times as likely to have a heart attack or heart-related death in the following years. People with the so-called "Type D" personality were four ...