![]() ![]() That creates a lot of tension and conflict. "When it comes to child-rearing women again are far are more responsible than men. "When a woman is working and she comes home from work, she feels she has to do so much more than the man does," says Fisher. In many ways it's still a man's world," says Mike Fisher.įor many women, this imbalance continues into the domestic sphere. "Women are paid less, they aren't as valued in the workplace, when they hit glass ceilings it's very hard for them to earn more than that. Gender inequality in society, the workplace and the home play a huge part. So what is behind this tidal wave of rage? According to clinical psychologist Dr Malie Coyne, studies suggest there are some common routes to anger for women, most notably feelings of powerlessness or injustice. Writer and broadcaster Soraya Chemaly tapped into a little-acknowledged wellspring when her book about women and anger, Rage Becomes Her, became a global phenomenon when it was published last year. He's not the only one to have noticed it. ![]() "What I identified is that women are much angrier than men," he says. Some years ago, his organisation carried out a study in which they surveyed over 12,000 people. Mike Fisher, psychotherapist and founder of the British Association of Anger Management, has observed this trend in his decades of experience in the field. ![]() ![]() But according to some experts, female fury is at epidemic proportions. ![]()
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