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Bradley Jay Fills In On NightSide with Dan Rea:
It seems these days, many people are quicker to anger than they used to be. Perhaps it's due to a combination of chronic stress, deep political and social divisions, financial pressures, or the constant churn of social media. Frequent exposure to outrage, combined with declining face-to-face interaction and growing feelings of isolation, can make it easier for disagreements to escalate into hostility. Bradley talked with psychologist Alice Connors-Kellgren about how to handle either your own anger or someone else's.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
By WBZ-AM4.2
9494 ratings
Bradley Jay Fills In On NightSide with Dan Rea:
It seems these days, many people are quicker to anger than they used to be. Perhaps it's due to a combination of chronic stress, deep political and social divisions, financial pressures, or the constant churn of social media. Frequent exposure to outrage, combined with declining face-to-face interaction and growing feelings of isolation, can make it easier for disagreements to escalate into hostility. Bradley talked with psychologist Alice Connors-Kellgren about how to handle either your own anger or someone else's.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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