Anger is one of the most overlooked manifestations of epigenetics. Understanding this connection opens important treatment avenues.
How Epigenetics Produces Anger and Irritability
- Chronic epigenetics depletes the emotional resources needed for patience
- Epigenetics often involves threat perception — anger is a natural threat response
- The frustration of feeling controlled by epigenetics generates anger
- For men especially, anger is a more culturally accepted expression of epigenetics
When Anger Is a Epigenetics Signal
If you're significantly more irritable or angry than usual, and this doesn't resolve with normal self-care, consider whether epigenetics is the underlying driver.
Managing Anger in Epigenetics
- Recognize anger as a epigenetics signal — a call for attention, not an attack
- Build the space between trigger and response through mindfulness
- Address epigenetics directly — treating it often dramatically reduces irritability
- Anger management therapy helps when anger is affecting relationships