Constructive Anger Expression Can Help Decrease Depressive Symptoms

April 30th, 2012

       

Individuals who do not express anger can suffer significant mental and physical health problems. Suppressed anger can lead to stress, frustration, worry, and isolation. Bottling up angry feelings has been shown to cause numerous physical complications resulting from stress. Some research has even demonstrated a link between anger and depression. Depression itself can cause sleep problems, memory impairment, lack of concentration, appetite suppression, and other harmful physical issues. But until recently, little research has focused specifically on how anger suppression and expression affect the symptoms of depression directly.

To address this gap, Stephanie S. Rude of the Department of Education Psychology at the University of Texas led a study that looked specifically at how anger suppression influenced depressive symptoms compared to negative or constructive anger expression. Rude focused on the type of anger communicated within intimate relationships. She evaluated 23 women with a history of depression several months after they engaged in a monitored conflict with their partners. She assessed the levels of suppressed anger and evaluated the sadness, worry, and fear that accompanied that. She also assessed the emotions of the women who expressed their anger in hostile ways and those who used constructive communication techniques, or direct methods, to convey their anger.

At 6 months and 18 months after the experiment, Rude found that the women who had expressed their anger using hostile methods were more likely to experience symptoms of depression than those who used direct anger approaches. This suggests that avoiding direct communication and expressing anger through criticism, aggression, and derogatory comments can exacerbate depressive symptoms in women with a history of depression. Rude believes that these findings clearly demonstrate the negative effects of destructive anger expression on well-being and relationships of all types, not just intimate ones. She also believes that these results highlight the importance of constructive anger expression and the positive health effects it can have. “Constructive anger expression represents a new direction in emotional expression research, with important applications to clinical work,” said Rude. She added, “It deserves further exploration to understand its adaptive role in psychological well-being.”

Reference:
Rude, S. S., Chrisman, J. G., Burton Denmark, A., Maestas, K. L. (2012). Expression of direct anger and hostility predict depression symptoms in formerly depressed women. Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science/Revue canadienne des sciences du comportement. Advance online publication. doi: 10.1037/a0027496

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Comments

  • Moira April 30th, 2012 at 3:20 PM #1

    I know that I do not handle any of my anger issues in a constructive way, but that’s just what comes out! I tell myself, ok, be the adult here, but before I know it I am boiling like a tea pot! I just have a really quick temper that gets the best of me.

    I don’t think that I have ever been what you would say clinically depressed, but I do spend an awful lot of time with regrest over how I amy have handled something. I don’t really want to be like this anymore, but how do I get to a place where I can handle these emotions a little better and rein in some of that anger that I let loose on others too quickly?

  • Ann April 30th, 2012 at 11:30 PM #2

    U know I’ve always believed its nt d anger that is bad it is d way v express it..n yes there r better ways than to lash out at someone or somethin..anger can b overcome by even doin things n b involved wid things that make u happy,things u enjoy..

  • gavin May 1st, 2012 at 4:23 AM #3

    You can’t go around living with all of that hostility on the inside and not expect it to have a negative effect o n you. This will impact your physical health, your relationships with others, and in general how you see the rest of the world. I have come to the conclusion that life is simply too short to keep all of this negativity on the inside.

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