The researchers found a significant relation for age with most anger measures, with increases in State and Trait Anger and Anger Control with age. HealthDay News — Aging is significantly related to ...
Women become better at managing anger as they age, particularly during midlife—a period often marked by hormonal shifts and emotional challenges—a study found. The research, published in the journal ...
Women with anger issues are more likely to develop more severe depressive symptoms during the menopause transition. This effect was strongest in women using hormone therapy for menopause symptoms. To ...
July 2 (UPI) --Remember your sweet-hearted grandmother, who never seemed out of sorts no matter what nonsense landed in her lap? That's a skill, and it improves during a person's lifespan, a new study ...
This story is featured in the January/February issue of ESSENCE. Black women have a fraught relationship with anger. Whether we’re distancing ourselves from the harmful stereotype of the combative, ...
As a man, you might encounter an easily angered or easily irritated woman. These are some of the reasons why she might be angry. 1. Hormones Some women get moody during that time of the month. She ...
It is impossible for me to think about my childhood without recalling the misogyny and threats of sexual violence. I was 5 years old when the church janitor lured me into the men’s bathroom and ...
Several people are taking to X, sharing pictures of posters put up of an angry, wide-eyed woman. Who this woman is remained a mystery until some on the internet found out who she is.
The New York Times Sunday magazine published a piece entitled “I Used to Insist I Didn’t Get Angry: Not Anymore.” The author, a woman, courageously explores the topic of societal and internalized ...
Women have long been discouraged from the awareness and forthright expression of anger. Sugar and spice are the ingredients from which we are made. We are the nurturers, the soothers, the peacemakers, ...
Contrary to previous research suggesting that expressing anger in the workplace leads to higher status and positive outcomes, a new study by researchers from Hebrew University of Jerusalem and ...