There’s a moment I’ll never forget. A father and teenage daughter, locked in a screaming match in a parking lot. He wanted her home by ten. She wanted midnight. Both were furious.
A stranger walked up, an older woman, and said nothing. She just stood there, present. After a moment, she looked at the daughter and said, “You want him to trust you.” Then to the father: “You’re scared something will happen to her.”
Both of them stopped. Nodded.
The anger didn’t vanish immediately, but something shifted. They were finally speaking the same language.
She didn’t tell them to calm down. She gave them empathy.
Now consider Viktor Frankl, the psychiatrist who survived Nazi concentration camps. In his groundbreaking work, he observed something remarkable about anger in the most brutal conditions. The prisoners who survived with their humanity intact weren’t necessarily the calmest ones. They were the ones who maintained their capacity for empathy, even in hell.
Frankl wrote about moments when angry prisoners would lash out, and others would respond not with matching rage or forced calm, but with understanding. “I see you’re suffering.” “I know this is unbearable.” Those simple acknowledgments of shared humanity did more to dissolve destructive anger than any amount of emotional suppression.
He witnessed that anger, left alone and unmet, turns toxic. It becomes bitterness, hatred, dehumanization. But anger met with genuine empathy transforms into something else entirely: a catalyst for deeper connection and mutual understanding.
The moral? You can’t think your way out of anger. You can’t breathe your way past it. You have to connect your way through it.
That parking lot moment and Frankl’s observations prove the same truth: empathy doesn’t just manage anger. It answers the question anger is really asking: “Do you see me? Am I alone in this?”
And when the answer is yes, I see you, the anger has nowhere left to go.