Why is My Spouse so Angry?

Why is My Spouse So Angry?

As I started thinking about this question, I had to laugh. Why? What’s so funny about an angry spouse? Nothing, really. I giggled because I know all too well about anger these days. Just this morning, my spouse asked me this question! “Honey, why do you seem so angry lately?” Here’s my reply (it was a text):

Because I’ve been stuck in this house for over three months. Covid is still raging and I know people who are sick and dying. The EU won’t let me into France so that I can visit my only grandchildren. Our country is racially, politically and culturally divided like never before. I don’t feel safe at restaurants, my hair salon or the gym. I miss my friends. I miss singing at church. I am worried that my elderly father and uncle might die before I see them again. I’m furious that my aunt’s funeral was on zoom. I hate this Sheltering-at-Home weight around my middle. AND, frankly you’re starting to really annoy me!

As a Marriage Therapist working on Zoom for the past four months, I’ve been hearing a lot about anger from the couples I see.  One of my colleagues, Lee Miller, LMFT, taught me that the times we are living in are called VUCA. This is apparently a term used by military leaders to describe the climate of difficult situations and determine the best leadership strategy to move forward. The acronym VUCA stands for volatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguous. As she points out, we are certainly living in VUCA times!

You don’t have to look very far to see examples of anger in our culture. It shows up in the news as domestic violence, child abuse, and workplace disruption. We are angry, stressed-out people who don’t seem to know how to control ourselves very well.

One idea, often held by mental health professionals, is that anger is a “secondary” emotion.
It’s like an overlay for softer, more vulnerable feelings. Sometimes anger is more energizing than the underlying emotions from which it tries to protect us. Soft emotions like sadness and fear can be debilitating. What feelings come up in you when you consider 2020 so far?

VUCA—volatility, uncertainty, complexity and ambiguity stir up fear, sadness, anxiety and grief in me. Life as we knew it has changed and the changes have not been predictable. Each day seems to bring with it new developments and contradictory information. The couples I work with are more irritable, sometimes specifically with each other, sometimes just taking it out on each other.

Generally we see anger as a predictable response to ongoing frustrations in our day to day lives.
It is a cluster of emotions ranging from annoyance to blinding rage. Once triggered, it changes how we look, how we  sound, what we’re thinking and how we behave. Like all emotional reactions, it comes from the “old brain” or the limbic system where our emotional memories are stored in the amygdala. They’re there in the service of survival. If an old hurtful memory is triggered by something in the present, reacting with anger can help us to survive the reoccurrence of the painful event. This can get activated even when the original danger is long gone.

I’ve seen frustration and annoyance turn to full blown anger when there doesn’t seem to be a way to clear or resolve the challenges in the situation.
If we don’t have total control over the factors and situations that make us so angry, perhaps we should at least take a look at controlling our angry reactions.

In referring to VUCA times, I’m really talking about the way in which our sadness, fear and vulnerability is turned to anger because of increased stressors in our lives. A good first step in managing anger is to reduce stress through selfcare. I recommend practices like breath work, meditation, mindfulness, yoga, exercise or journaling. Through these types of activities, we are calming our nervous systems and learning to resist the pull into the limbic reactivity that fuels anger.

It’s a good idea when trying to manage your anger to examine your thoughts.
We quickly label things that frustrate us and react as if that thought is gospel truth! Asking yourself if something is really true can be a simple step in defusing anger.

For example, the husband of a couple that I see in therapy recently became so angry at his wife that he upended a coffee table. They were both shocked at his behavior and, as you can imagine, she was mad, hurt and scared by it. I helped him to examine his anger when he had calmed down. He admitted that he had “seen red” when she criticized his decision to go to a recently opened restaurant with a friend.

By examining his feelings, he was able to see that the thought he had had was that she didn’t care about him or his emotional health. That really made him furious after all he’s done for her and how much he cares about her.  He knew that despite Covid and the need to socially distance, he had been experiencing feelings of loneliness and isolation and really “needed” to see his friend. He was furious when she questioned his judgement because he thought she really must not care about him! Underneath the anger were deep feelings of fear and sadness.

When asked, he knew that the idea that his wife didn’t really care about him was not a true thought. He was able to name many ways in which she demonstrated her caring.

Of course, in an intimate relationship, it is important to know and practice good communication.
This requires taking a deep breath to give yourself a chance to respond rather than react to your partner. Putting a pause between the event and the reaction, gives us a chance to choose a more loving, empathetic response. Anger seems to drive more anger, but assertively stating your frustration and asking for what you need can actually calm the situation down and create more connection between the two of you.

In the example above, it would have been far better if my client’s wife had been able to express her fears about the danger of his outing rather than criticizing him. Barring that, he would have been better served by taking a breath and calmly talking about his need to go out with the friend and the fear that she just didn’t care about him. The irony is that her critical statement was born from her deep caring and fear that he’d become sick.

A practice of good communication between them could have helped them avoid the whole unfortunate situation. Sometimes we just need to take a time-out and go breathe or self-soothe until we’re able to respond from our cortical, mature brain, rather than from our reactive, emotional one. From this place, it’s easier to remove negativity and express empathy for our partner’s softer, vulnerable feelings.

As we navigate these stressful times, it’s important to recognize our anger and work to manage it. I recommend that we all:

  • Take inventory of our stressors and develop practices that de-stress.
  • Pause to find the hurt, sadness and fear underlying the anger.
  • Examine the “truth” of the thoughts leading to the anger.
  • Learn and practice effective communication tools.
  • Focus on empathy rather than judgement and criticism.

Remember that the goal is not to totally eliminate the experience of anger.
It’s human to get angry at times. Our limbic brains rely on it to get us out of danger or perceived threat. Rather, we must all learn to recognize it and manage it when it occurs. After my text to my husband, I spent some time realizing that there wasn’t much I could do to change the source of my frustration and annoyance. I can, however, express it for what it is—grief, sadness, fear and disappointment. I’ve also become aware that a little yoga and exercise wouldn’t hurt either!

Anger is a powerful emotion. Please reach out to a therapist or friend if you need help managing during these stressful times.

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