Each episode of anger
sets off a physiological response in your body, causing your heart to beat
faster, your blood pressure to rise and your coronary arteries to narrow.
Dr. Leo Maddow of the
University of Pennsylvania observed that brain hemorrhages are usually caused
by a combination of hypertension and cerebral arteriosclerosis. He found that
anger elevates blood pressure which may cause the diseased cerebral artery to
rupture, resulting in a stroke. "Someone who stays angry long after the
particular incident that caused the anger may be committing slow suicide,” he
says.
If we knew the
damaging effects of anger on our body, then we will realise how appropriate is
Paul’s admonition: “In your anger do not sin: Do not let the sun go down while
you are still angry” (Ephesians 4:26).
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