Have you ever snapped at someone over something surprisingly small?
Maybe it was a delayed reply, someone interrupting you mid-sentence, a forgotten chore, or a coffee mug left on the table. In that moment, your reaction feels completely justified.
But a little while later, when everything has settled, another feeling quietly takes over — guilt.
“I shouldn’t have reacted like that.”
“Why did something so small upset me so much?”
If you’ve ever replayed an argument in your head or wished you had handled a situation differently, you’re not alone.
The interesting thing is that it was probably never about the coffee mug, the text message, or the dishes.
Those were simply the moments when everything else finally spilled over.
The Misunderstood Emotion
Anger has always had a bad reputation. Many of us grow up believing it’s something to suppress, control, or apologise for. We learn that expressing anger makes us difficult or immature.
The truth is, anger isn’t the problem. It’s your mind’s way of saying, “Something here needs attention.”
“Anger is not a fire to be put out. It is a signal to be read.”
What Lies Beneath the Anger?
Most of the time, anger isn’t the first emotion we experience — it’s simply the loudest one.
Underneath anger, you’ll usually find one or more of these:
- Hurt — someone’s words or actions wounded you
- Fear — something feels out of control or threatening
- Shame — you feel embarrassed, humiliated, or exposed
- Exhaustion — you’ve been giving too much for too long
- A need that hasn’t been met and doesn’t know how else to be heard
“You are not overreacting. You are reacting to everything at once.”
Anger is the loud outer layer. Those feelings above are the quiet inner ones. Addressing only the anger is like treating a fever without looking for the infection.
Understanding what’s beneath the anger helps you understand why it showed up in the first place.
Sometimes, Anger Doesn’t Look Like Anger
We often imagine anger as shouting or losing our temper. In reality, it can be much quieter.
Sometimes it shows up as constant irritability or impatience with the people around you. Sometimes it becomes the harsh voice in your head that’s never satisfied with anything you do. It may even appear as resentment, procrastination, emotional withdrawal, or feeling drained without quite knowing why.
If you’ve spent years believing anger wasn’t acceptable, you may have become very good at directing it inward instead of expressing it outward. That can be just as exhausting as an angry outburst.
Anger as a Boundary Marker
One of anger’s most important messages is this: something needs to change.
Sometimes that means communicating more clearly. Sometimes it means saying no to something you’ve been saying yes to out of guilt or habit. Sometimes it means acknowledging that a situation has become genuinely difficult.
Anger, when listened to, often becomes the very thing that helps you make a necessary change you’d been too afraid to make before.
Listening Instead of Fighting It
Our first instinct is often to calm ourselves down as quickly as possible. While taking a pause is helpful, it’s equally important to understand what the anger is trying to tell you once the intensity has passed.
Instead of asking, “How do I stop feeling angry?” try asking yourself:
- What happened just before I reacted?
- What emotion came before the anger?
- Is there a boundary or need that hasn’t been acknowledged?
You don’t need perfect answers. Often, simply becoming curious is enough to shift anger from something that controls you into something that helps you understand yourself better. And that’s where self-awareness begins.
You Don’t Have to Figure It Out Alone
Sometimes a conversation with someone outside the situation helps us notice patterns we’ve been living with for years.
Therapy isn’t about getting rid of anger. It’s about understanding what it’s trying to tell you, learning healthier ways to respond, and recognising the needs that may have gone unnoticed for far too long.
Whenever that feels right for you, Trijog’s therapists are here to walk that journey with empathy, curiosity, and without judgement.


