Why am I angry all the time?
Answered by Dr. Nitnem Singh Sodhi · Mental Health Counsellor, Neuropsychologist & Psychotherapist · Updated 2026-06-30
Short answer
Chronic irritability in adults is one of the most under-recognised signs of depression and burnout in India. It rarely responds to anger management alone — you need to treat what is underneath.
Western textbooks say depression looks like sadness. In Indian men (and increasingly women in demanding jobs), it more often looks like irritability, short fuse, road rage, snapping at family. The person feels 'I am not sad, I am just done.' That is depression wearing a different mask.
The three usual culprits
1) Depression — anger turned outward instead of inward. 2) Burnout — the tank is empty, so small demands feel like assaults. 3) Unprocessed grief or trauma — the body stays on alert. Also: chronic pain, poor sleep, thyroid dysfunction and low B12 cause irritability and are worth ruling out.
What actually helps
Sleep protection (7–8 hours, dark room, no phone in bed) before anything else. Screen for depression with PHQ-9. Then either therapy focused on the primary emotion under the anger, or medical review if the physical drivers are present.
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