The Age of Rage

There’s so much to enrage a sane person — not just in the headlines, but in the everyday fabric of our lives

Timothy Kreider
Human Parts

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Photo: oencke/Flickr

TThe last couple of days I’ve been filled with rage. Nothing pathological or out of the ordinary — just some minor spikes in the normal baseline of everyday male rage. The triggering incidents were relatively trivial: a couple of man-boys wouldn’t shut up on Amtrak’s Quiet Car (these days an arena of bloody hand-to-hand fighting over etiquette), and a day later a scammer ripped me off for a pair of fake opera tickets. I was ultimately the victor in both situations: the guys on the train, after sassing me a little to show off for each other, did in fact quiet down, and my girlfriend and I ended up having a fun night anyway, because we always do. Both very annoying episodes, but neither one will matter six months from now.

But rage is seldom proportionate to its ostensible object. (I never think about the guy who stabbed me in the neck 25 years ago, but would coldly execute the kid who pulled my hair and called me “Mister Temper” when I was six). So over the next few days I found myself helplessly replaying the train argument, except coming up with better lines for myself, and envisioning elaborate revenge scenarios against the scammer. Even as I felt this feedback loop starting up in my head, I dreaded it; it’s…

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Timothy Kreider
Human Parts

Tim Kreider is the author of two essay collections, and a frequent contributor to Medium and The New York Times. He lives in NYC and the Chesapeake Bay area.