Anger: What It’s Really Trying to Do
- Mordechai Kornfeld
- Mar 26
- 1 min read

Anger’s job is protection.
It shows up when something important feels crossed.
A boundary.
A value.
A sense of fairness.
Not to hurt.
To signal.
What It Looks Like
From the outside, anger is easy to judge.
Loud.
Sharp.
Quick.
Or the opposite.
Quiet.
Avoiding.
Letting things slide.
It can look like overreacting.
Or like not reacting at all.
But both come from the same place.
Something important doesn’t feel protected.
What’s Underneath
Anger is not random.
It’s tied to what matters.
Respect.
Fairness.
Being treated right.
When that gets crossed, the system reacts.
Sometimes fast.
Sometimes not at all.
Same signal.
Different response.
Too Much Anger
The feeling takes over.
Example: Someone bumps into you and you assume it was on purpose.
You react fast.
Before checking what actually happened.
Protection turns into escalation.
Too Little Anger
The feeling gets buried.
Example: Someone keeps speaking to you disrespectfully.
You stay quiet.
Tell yourself it’s not worth it.
But something inside keeps track.
Because what matters isn’t being protected.
Just Right Anger
The feeling does its job.
Example: Someone crosses a line and you say,
“That’s not okay with me.”
Clear.
Calm.
Direct.
Protection without damage.
Why This Matters
When anger is too loud, it pushes people away.
When it’s too quiet, people cross lines without even knowing.
Either way, something important gets lost.
What Helps
Not shutting it down.
Not acting on it right away.
Slowing it enough to understand:
What felt crossed.
What matters here.
That’s where real protection starts.
A Better Question
Instead of asking:
Why am I so angry?
Try asking:
What is this anger trying to protect?


