Reflections
Anger. A day rarely goes by without us feeling angry. It is not necessary to cite examples. Sometimes, it’s just a minor reason, like hating the fly on the wall. Sometimes, anger has important reasons. Anger seems to become the main part of our daily life. That’s why it is really important

By Klaus Döring
By Klaus Döring
Anger. A day rarely goes by without us feeling angry. It is not necessary to cite examples. Sometimes, it’s just a minor reason, like hating the fly on the wall. Sometimes, anger has important reasons.
Anger seems to become the main part of our daily life. That’s why it is really important to talk again about this phenomenon. As I said, anger is one of the most basic emotions. Everyone can really get angry. If someone tells you he won’t get angry, better not believe him.
Anger is a terrible feeling of being against something or someone. It can be my neighbor because he is still burning poisonous plastic and rubber garbage. Many of us get angry observing some politicians these days worldwide.
Anger is a hostile emotion that sets people against one another, or even against themselves. By its nature, anger involves opposition, hostility, hatred, and dislike. Anger, however, is simpler to define than to identify. Emotions of antagonism can take a wide variety of faces. Expressions of anger range from the overt, in-your-face brand of open hostility to the cold indifference of a silent individual.
Anger in the workplace is becoming very common nowadays.
One of my good friends works as a stewardess. Imagine yourself 35,000 feet up, pushing a trolley down a narrow aisle surrounded by restless passengers. A toddler is blocking your path, his parents not immediately visible. One passenger is irritated that he can no longer pay cash for an in-flight meal, while another is demanding to be allowed past to use the toilet. And your job is to meet all of their needs with the same show of friendly willingness. For a cabin crew member, this is when emotional labor kicks in at work.
A term first coined by sociologist Arlie Hochschild, it’s the work we do to regulate our emotions to create “a publicly visible facial and bodily display within the workplace.”
At times, anger can feel like an inner fire. It hits you in the gut. You see red and feel hot and maybe sweaty. Your stomach gives you problems, your blood pressure rises, and your breathing rate increases. Neighbors or politicians are not the only reasons for anger. The silent withdrawal and lack of understanding and innumerable shortcomings of a partner or family member are often an indication that one is angrily punishing the other for not doing things his or her way.
Back to the workplace: Unhelpful attitudes such as “I’m not good enough” may lead to thinking patterns in the workplace such as “No one else is working as hard as I seem to be” or “I must do a perfect job,” and can initiate and maintain high levels of workplace anxiety.
When research into emotional labor first began, it focused on the service industry with the underlying presumption that the more client or customer interaction you had, the more emotional labor was needed.
However, more recently, psychologists have expanded their focus to other professions and found burnout can relate more closely to how employees manage their emotions during interactions, rather than the volume of interactions themselves. Perhaps just today you turned to a colleague to convey interest in what they said, or had to work hard not to rise to criticism. It may have been that biting your lip rather than expressing feeling hurt was particularly demanding of your inner resources.
But in some cases, maintaining the facade can become too much, and the toll is cumulative.
As I stated earlier: Minor things could become the start of anger. Over the years, handling the stress caused by suppressing one’s emotions became much harder. Small things seemed huge, we easily dreaded going to work, and anxiety escalated.
Across the globe, employees in many professions are expected to embrace a work culture that requires the outward display of particular emotions — these can include ambition, aggression, and a hunger for success.
The way we handle emotional labor can be categorized in two ways — surface acting and deep acting.
“How we cope with high levels of emotional labor likely has its origins in childhood experience, which shapes the attitudes we develop about ourselves, others, and the world,” says clinical and occupational psychologist Lucy Leonard.
“Unhelpful attitudes such as ‘I’m not good enough’ may lead to thinking patterns in the workplace such as ‘No one else is working as hard as I seem to be’ or ‘I must do a perfect job,’ and can initiate and maintain high levels of workplace anxiety,” Leonard says.
When things get tough, you might be very lucky to talk to colleagues to unload. “It’s the saying it out loud that allows me to test and validate my own reaction. I can then go back to the person concerned,” one of my former officemates in Germany explained many years ago.
Those who report regularly having to display emotions at work that conflict with their own feelings are more likely to experience emotional exhaustion.
Remaining true to your feelings appears to be key — numerous studies show those who report regularly having to display emotions at work that conflict with their own feelings are more likely to experience emotional exhaustion.
Of course, everybody needs to be professional at work, and handling difficult clients and colleagues is often just part of the job. But what’s clear is that putting yourself in their shoes and trying to understand their position is ultimately of greater benefit to your own well-being than voicing sentiments that, deep down, you don’t believe.
Where it is possible, workers should be truly empathetic, be aware of the impact the interaction is having on them, and try to communicate in an authentic way. Easy to say, yes, I know. But let’s give it a try!
***
Email me at doringklaus@gmail.com, follow me on Facebook and LinkedIn, or visit www.germanexpatinthephilippines.blogspot.com or www.klausdoringsclassicalmusic.blogspot.com.
Article Information
Comments (0)
LEAVE A REPLY
No comments yet
Be the first to share your thoughts!
Related Articles

PGMN: between truth, trolls, and theatrics
The most cutting line in the entire Franco Mabanta-PGMN spectacle did not come from Congress, the NBI, or even Martin Romualdez’s camp. It came from veteran journalist Inday Espina-Varona, who, after watching part of the much-hyped “MartinLooterFund” episode, wrote with the kind of bluntness only old-school reporters can still afford: “17

EMPTY NEST
When the children left, the mornings stopped rushing. I no longer woke up to hurried footsteps, slamming doors, or voices calling out for missing things. There was no longer a need to coordinate schedules, prepare lunches, or remind anyone of deadlines. The alarm clock lost its purpose and urgency because nothing in

Democracy depends on broad-based taxation—history is clear about that
Political debates about democracy often focus on culture, leadership, or polarization. But history points to a more prosaic—and more powerful—driver of political outcomes: how governments raise revenue. Across thousands of years of human history, the strongest predictor of whether power is shared or concentrated is not population size, technological sophistication, or
