• Home
  • >
  • Blog
  • >
  • Blog
  • >
  • Healthy Anger & the Mind–Body Connection with Dr. Gabor Maté

Written by:

Updated on:

November 12, 2025

In this dialogue with Dr. Gabor Maté, we explore why anger isn’t the enemy—suppression is—and how mindfulness helps us transmute rage, panic, and grief into wise boundary-setting and care.

In our fast-paced and often overwhelming world, it’s easy to rush through the day without pausing to simply breathe. Yet within each breath lies an opportunity to find calm, clarity, and connection with ourselves and the present moment. The practice of three mindful breaths offers a simple but powerful way to return to this sense of grounding, anytime, anywhere. In just a few minutes, you can release tension, steady your thoughts, and reconnect with your body. Whether you’re new to mindfulness or deepening your journey, this short guided exercise invites you to slow down, breathe deeply, and find peaceful awareness within.

Key takeaways:

  • Anger is a built‑in boundary system. When expressed wisely, it protects what’s healthy and keeps out what’s harmful—emotionally and physically. Suppressing it chronically can carry real costs.
  • Our emotional and immune systems are deeply linked. Research in psychoneuroimmunology shows stress and emotion regulation patterns influence immune function.
  • Rage, panic/grief, fear, care, and more are primary emotion circuits. They’re not “bad”; they’re part of our mammalian brain’s survival toolkit.
  • Silencing yourself can be hazardous. Habitual suppression and “self‑silencing” are associated with higher mortality risk in longitudinal studies.
  • Mindfulness offers safe, practical ways to feel and metabolize anger and grief. Start with evidence‑informed, trauma‑sensitive practices below.
  • Why anger is not the problem (and why suppression is)

    In the video, Dr. Maté distinguishes healthy anger—a moment‑to‑moment boundary signal—from unhealthy, retaliatory rage. Healthy anger says, “No, that’s not okay,” then resolves. Unhealthy anger attacks or ruminates. Mindfulness helps us notice the energy of anger without acting it out or pushing it down.

    This view aligns with psychoneuroimmunology research showing that how we relate to emotions—especially through suppression—affects physiology. Meta‑analytic evidence indicates stress and emotion regulation patterns can dampen aspects of immune function, which helps explain why “pushing down” feelings may carry somatic costs.

    Beyond stress broadly, newer reviews suggest expressive suppression (inhibiting emotional expression) correlates with inflammatory biomarkers (e.g., IL‑10, TNF‑α, ICAM‑1) and cardiovascular load—reminding us that how we regulate matters for health.

    Want a refresher on mindful ways to work with anger? Explore Mindfulness for Anger: 3 Practices and our Transforming Anger worksheet.

    The brain’s primary emotion systems (and where “RAGE” fits)

    Neuroscientist Jaak Panksepp mapped seven cross‑species emotional systems—SEEKING, RAGE, FEAR, LUST, CARE, PANIC/GRIEF, and PLAY—that help mammals navigate life. “RAGE” (in capital letters in his nomenclature) is not a defect; it’s a survival circuit that mobilizes when boundaries are threatened. Likewise, PANIC/GRIEF signals separation distress, CARE supports bonding, and FEAR protects from danger. Seeing these as necessary helps remove shame from strong emotions and supports mindful integration rather than suppression.

    To deepen your teaching lens on emotions, see Mindfulness of Emotions and our Naming the Feelings script.

    Childhood attachment and the habit of pushing emotions down

    Why do so many of us suppress anger and grief? Often because, as children, expressing them felt unsafe for attachment. We learned to “be good” to keep caregivers close. As adults, that once‑adaptive strategy can backfire: chronic suppression has been prospectively linked to increased risk of all‑cause, cancer, and cardiovascular mortality.

    Findings specific to self‑silencing in marriage are striking: in a 10‑year analysis from the Framingham Offspring Study, women who routinely silenced themselves during conflict had a fourfold higher risk of death compared with those who spoke up. The takeaway isn’t to discharge anger recklessly; it’s to cultivate wise, embodied expression and relational repair.

    If this resonates, practice How to Practice Mindfulness in Relationships and try our A Meditation for Boundaries.

    Healthy anger = wise boundaries (not aggression)

    Dr. Maté emphasizes healthy anger as boundary‑setting—not blame or attack. It rises, communicates, protects, and subsides. That’s also a core teaching in When the Body Says No, where he explores how boundary violations and chronic emotional repression relate to illness patterns. Mindfulness helps us feel anger in the body, name the need, and respond with clarity rather than compulsion.

    Listen to The Value of Healthy Anger and A Meditation for Frustration.

    Practice: a short “RAIN for Anger” sequence

    When you notice a boundary has been crossed:

    1. Recognize the felt sense of anger (heat, tightness, urge).
    2. Allow it to be present (for now) without acting it out or pushing it away.
    3. Investigate kindly: What boundary feels crossed? What value needs protecting?
    4. Nurture: place a hand on the body; name a wise next step (request, limit, pause).

    Try it with our RAIN meditation script for difficult emotions and the printable Using RAIN worksheet. For more support with intense states, see Staying With Emotions (worksheet).

    Why RAIN? Suppression can carry physiological costs; mindful, embodied processing supports regulation without the social and biological toll of bottling emotions.

    Meeting grief mindfully

    In our talk, we also discuss PANIC/GRIEF—the pain of separation and loss. Grief is not a pathology to fix; it is a process to tend

    Research continues to clarify how emotion regulation during bereavement relates to immune functioning—another reason to support feeling, not numbing.

    A note on ALS and emotional well‑being

    Dr. Maté references research that people with ALS who can express difficult feelings may fare better than those who cannot. While direct trials isolating anger expression are limited, studies do suggest that emotional well‑being relates to slower disease progression and longer survival in ALS cohorts. The broader point stands: wise emotional processing—supported by mindfulness and compassionate community—matters.

    For teachers & clinicians: keep it trauma‑sensitive

    When guiding anger or grief work, safety and pacing are essential. Resource first, track the body, and invite choice at every step. If you teach, consider our Trauma‑Sensitive Mindfulness Course and Mindfulness Teaching Fundamentals for practical frameworks, scripts, and language that keep students within their window of tolerance.

    Further Study & Resources

    MindfulnessExercises.com Resources

    If you’d like to teach this work

    We train caring professionals to share evidence‑informed, trauma‑aware mindfulness in communities, clinics, schools, and workplaces. Explore our Mindfulness Meditation Teacher Certification Program or visit MindfulnessExercises.com for details, curriculum, and mentorship opportunities.

    A Gentle Disclaimer

    This article is for educational purposes and is not a substitute for medical or mental‑health advice. If intense anger or grief feels unmanageable, please seek support from a qualified healthcare professional or therapist.

    Become a Certified Mindfulness Teacher

    About the author 

    Sean Fargo is a mindfulness teacher and founder of Mindfulness Exercises, a global platform offering evidence‑based resources and teacher certification. A former Buddhist monk in the Thai Theravada tradition, he bridges contemplative wisdom with modern psychology to make mindfulness practical at work and in life. Sean has taught alongside Jack Kornfield and supported leaders at organizations such as Reddit, PG&E, and DocuSign. Through online trainings, guided meditations, and mentorship, he has helped thousands of educators, clinicians, and coaches bring mindfulness to diverse communities. Sean’s mission is simple and ambitious: expand access to authentic, science‑informed practice while cultivating compassion, clarity, and resilience. Today, Mindfulness Exercises serves millions with free and premium tools, empowering individuals and teams to lead with presence and purpose.

    Page [tcb_pagination_current_page] of [tcb_pagination_total_pages]

    >