As parents, we often seek to mollify, quell or even extinguish our children's anger. Life is busy, we're moving fast. Anger slows us down. It stresses us out.
But the disruptive quality of anger is exactly what makes it a powerful agent for social change, says Rebecca Traister in her book, "Good and Mad: The Revolutionary Power of Women's Anger."
Hers is one of two books out this past fall that explore the intersection of gender and rage. After hearing Traister speak, I started wondering if my desire for peace at home was eroding my daughters' potential to create peace in the world.
The other book, "Rage Becomes Her: The Power of Women's Anger" by Soraya Chemaly, looks at the extensive research on our gendered relationship with anger.
There is little difference in how boys and girls experience and express emotions, says Chemaly, but there is substantial difference in how we respond. Girls are rewarded for being pleasant, agreeable and helpful. By preschool, children believe it is normal for boys to be angry, but not girls.
"We are so busy teaching girls to be likable that we forget to teach them that they have the right to be respected," Chemaly says.
The effects of that carry into adulthood. Research shows that, just like girls and boys, "women and men experience anger the same way, but men are much more likely to express that anger verbally, while women tend to keep it to themselves," says Chemaly. In doing so, "we lose our ability to defend ourselves."
One study found that in 75 percent of cases of everyday discrimination women think of responding assertively, but only do so less than 40 percent of the time. The MeToo movement is committed to changing that in the world.