By Dr. Gregg Jacobs, PHD
When anger becomes chronic it can affect health, particularly when it takes the form of hostility, an intense type of anger that involves an attitude of cynicism, animosity, and aggression. Because hostile people expect that others will mistreat them, they mistrust others in advance. They see everyone as the enemy.
Defuse your short fuse
Hostile people live with a chronically short "fuse" that causes blood pressure and heart rate to rise, blood fat and cholesterol to increase, blood platelets to become "stickier" so that they block artery walls, blood vessels to constrict, and oxygen flow to the heart to decrease. When these changes persist, they can lead to serious illness, even death. (See the Truestar Stress Page for more information on how stressors such as hostility affect the body and health).











