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The Volcano: When Anger Erupts
Some anger stays quiet.
Some turns inward.
And some of it builds pressure until it explodes.
In today’s episode, we’re talking about The Volcano—a pattern of anger that simmers beneath the surface until it erupts in sudden, intense, and often uncharacteristic bursts. If you’ve ever felt “fine” one moment and completely overwhelmed the next, you’re not alone.
This type of anger is especially common for women in midlife who were taught—explicitly or implicitly—to suppress frustration, avoid conflict, and keep the peace. Eventually, that pressure has to go somewhere.
In this episode, we explore:
Five ways to work with Volcano anger:
Support makes a difference:
Volcano anger doesn’t heal in isolation. We talk about how therapy, coaching, stress or anger support groups, medical check-ins (hormones, sleep, thyroid), and trusted relationships can provide accountability and safe outlets. The goal isn’t to eliminate anger—it’s to direct it before it detonates.
Hope & healing:
Noticing a trigger before you explode is progress. Pausing once when you didn’t before is progress.
You’re not broken.
Your anger is energy looking for direction.
When you learn to release it safely, anger shifts from destruction to fuel—and becomes a compass pointing toward unmet needs and necessary change.
Resources mentioned:
Closing thought:
Volcano anger doesn’t define you.
It usually means you’ve been holding too much inside for too long.
The more you release in safe, honest ways, the less power the eruption has.
Reflection for the week:
Can you try one pause—just one—before reacting?
👉 For more resources, courses, and ways to connect, visit www.stephanieyork.com
By Stephanie YorkSend us a text
The Volcano: When Anger Erupts
Some anger stays quiet.
Some turns inward.
And some of it builds pressure until it explodes.
In today’s episode, we’re talking about The Volcano—a pattern of anger that simmers beneath the surface until it erupts in sudden, intense, and often uncharacteristic bursts. If you’ve ever felt “fine” one moment and completely overwhelmed the next, you’re not alone.
This type of anger is especially common for women in midlife who were taught—explicitly or implicitly—to suppress frustration, avoid conflict, and keep the peace. Eventually, that pressure has to go somewhere.
In this episode, we explore:
Five ways to work with Volcano anger:
Support makes a difference:
Volcano anger doesn’t heal in isolation. We talk about how therapy, coaching, stress or anger support groups, medical check-ins (hormones, sleep, thyroid), and trusted relationships can provide accountability and safe outlets. The goal isn’t to eliminate anger—it’s to direct it before it detonates.
Hope & healing:
Noticing a trigger before you explode is progress. Pausing once when you didn’t before is progress.
You’re not broken.
Your anger is energy looking for direction.
When you learn to release it safely, anger shifts from destruction to fuel—and becomes a compass pointing toward unmet needs and necessary change.
Resources mentioned:
Closing thought:
Volcano anger doesn’t define you.
It usually means you’ve been holding too much inside for too long.
The more you release in safe, honest ways, the less power the eruption has.
Reflection for the week:
Can you try one pause—just one—before reacting?
👉 For more resources, courses, and ways to connect, visit www.stephanieyork.com