On the other hand, anger and masculinity are powerfully enmeshed and reinforce one another. In boys and men, anger has to be controlled, but it is often seen as a virtue, especially when it is used to protect, defend, or lead.
Pao Ebihas quoted6 days ago
As girls, we are not taught to acknowledge or manage our anger so much as fear, ignore, hide, and transform it.
Pao Ebihas quoted6 days ago
If everyone feels anger, why focus on women? Why does gender matter?
Pao Ebihas quoted6 days ago
Anger is also not unidirectional but part of endless mental, physical, and intellectual feedback loops that operate below our conscious understanding.
Pao Ebihas quoted6 days ago
Relationships, culture, social status, exposure to discrimination, poverty, and access to power all factor into how we think about, experience, and utilize anger.
Pao Ebihas quoted6 days ago
While we experience anger internally, it is mediated culturally and externally by other people’s expectations and social prohibitions. Roles and responsibilities, power and privilege are the framers of our anger.
Pao Ebihas quoted6 days ago
Context is equally critical, however. Our responses to provocation, our assessments, and our judgments always involve a back-and-forth between character and context.
Pao Ebihas quoted6 days ago
Coping often involves self-silencing and feelings of powerlessness.
Pao Ebihas quoted6 days ago
While parents talk to girls about emotions more than they do to boys, anger is excluded.