HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesHealing Space | How to exit the rage cycle

Healing Space | How to exit the rage cycle

Every week it’s a new trigger, something to send us spinning into outrage, anger, anguish, despair. Escape is possible, though, through compassion for oneself and others.

August 07, 2021 / 20:12 IST
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Illustration by Suneesh K.
Illustration by Suneesh K.

Note to readers: Healing Space is a weekly series that helps you dive into your mental health and take charge of your wellbeing through practical DIY self-care methods.

It’s a never-ending cycle of outrage. It is exhausting. It is also inescapable. Even if you’re only logging on to track stock prices, it’s unlikely you can miss the calamities kept in circulation through a pop up, a social media update or a news feed. These external stimulants keep us in a loop of anger.

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Anger is our response to external threat, violation or injustice. It is a version of the flight or fight response in which the sympathetic nervous system gets activated. As a result, it generates neurochemical responses, like heightened heart rate, blood pressure, which sets off bodily responses like clenching of jaw, shoulders, self-protective thoughts. If you meet trigger after trigger, each adds up to interrupt functions like sleep to enable you to handle the perceived threat. This is an emotional response cycle. How do we break the cycle?

We each perceive threat according to our conditioning. For instance, people with a prior experience of feeling unsafe are likely to be more disturbed by news of a rape than others. The stated stimulant, i.e., the news, triggers emotional responses as dictated by the experience. A disaffected onlooker may only feed sad to hear it, but someone who identifies with the age, relationship, neighbourhood, or some other characteristic in the news, personalises it and thus perceives threat more significantly.