Psychiatrists prefer to reduce the complexity of human emotion and shorten it into four categories: anger, sadness, happiness, fear. Of the four, anger is the most common and comfortable emotion for men.

Of course, men have feelings other than anger, they feel sad, happy and fearful, but anger is the only socially acceptable emotion for them, there are many social taboos against Men who express their feelings in ways other than anger, we think of angry men as strong and more masculine, and men who express sadness or fear are weak and less masculine.

"The men are drawn to the anger because they are allowed to be angry and they are not allowed to be weak," the article added.

Another point of view is expressed by writer Lindsey Dodgson, who is interested in human behavior, psychology and mental health, on Insider, where she says "Anger is a secondary emotion, and this means that there are always other feelings beneath it, such as sadness or feeling hurt. For men, they resort to anger to hide what they feel, and fear is often the reason for their anger.

Men are more violent in expressing their anger than their short-term emotions (Pixels).

Ways to express anger

Researchers found that socialization can affect how men and women deal with their anger. Psychologists Sandra Thomas said on the American Psychological Association website that misconceptions were presented to both men and women through the socialization they received, men were urged to be more open with their anger. Urging them to keep their anger limited and low. "

Thomas, who has studied the experiences of women and men with anger, says that "anger in men is often seen as" manly "when men engage in fights or combat that are physically angry. For girls, it is not encouraged to behave this way because they usually reach them. A message that anger is annoying and not feminine.

Weiss says, "While women are more inclined to channel their anger inward and find a way to blame themselves, men are more vulnerable to attack because it helps them feel more control over their emotions, as well as the ability to control the people around them as well."

Fear and sadness are the hidden reasons behind the men’s chronic anger (Pixels).

Are men more angry?

In a study conducted by Thomas on the anger of women in 1993, which was a large-scale investigation that included 535 women between the ages of 25 and 66 years, with the aim of knowing the causes of women's anger, the study revealed three common roots of their anger, namely impotence, injustice and lack of responsibility for others.

However, women do not tend to be as aggressive as men in expressing anger, and they tend to speak more of their anger. They use more problem solving techniques to discuss a problem with someone who is angry at them.

In another study, Professor Raymond Digiuseppe, head of the Department of Psychology at St. John's University in New York, conducted the survey on 1,300 people between the ages of 18 and 90, and found that the differences in the degrees of overall anger for men and women were not significant, but he found differences in their treatment With anger.

Men scored higher on physical aggression, passive aggression, and experiences of reckless anger. They also often had a motive for revenge for their anger.

On the other hand, it has been shown that women get angry for a longer period of time, and are more resentful and less likely to express their anger, compared to men. Digiuseppe found that women used indirect aggression by "striking out" more people, with the intention not to speak to them again because of their anger.

The professor also found that anger slowly decreases with age, and differences in areas of anger between the sexes are less for those over 50 years of age, although men are still more likely to be aggressive and women are more likely to have longer anger episodes.