
Let’s be real…
PMDD rage isn’t just “feeling irritable.”
It’s the kind of anger that feels like it takes over.
Like one moment you’re fine… and the next, everything feels too much, too loud, too intense.
And then afterwards?
The guilt.
The overthinking.
The “that didn’t feel like me” spiral.
If you’ve experienced PMDD rage, anger, or emotional outbursts, you’re not alone.
And more importantly?
You’re not broken.
PMDD rage is a real, biological response.
But it’s also something you can learn to understand, manage, and move through with more support.
Let’s break it down.
PMDD (Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder) affects how your brain responds to hormonal changes—particularly shifts in oestrogen and progesterone.
This can impact:
Mood regulation
Emotional sensitivity
Stress response
Which is why PMDD anger and rage can feel sudden, intense, and hard to control.
Understanding this isn’t about labelling yourself…
It’s about creating awareness—so you can start responding differently.
One of the biggest shifts?
Separating you from the emotion.
Instead of:
“I’m overreacting”
Try:
“This is my PMDD phase. My system is heightened right now.”
That small reframe creates space.
And space = choice.
When PMDD rage feels unpredictable, it’s often because the pattern hasn’t been mapped yet.
Start noticing:
When does the anger show up in your cycle?
What triggers it faster during that phase?
What makes it worse (stress, lack of sleep, overwhelm)?
Because when you can see the pattern…
You stop feeling like it’s coming out of nowhere.
And instead? You can prepare for it.
If tracking feels overwhelming, this is actually why I created a simple PMDD Planner—to help you map your emotional patterns without overthinking it.
During PMDD, your emotional tolerance is lower.
So instead of pushing through like everything’s normal…
Ask:
“What can I reduce right now?”
This might look like:
Saying no more often
Limiting overstimulating environments
Giving yourself more space and quiet
This isn’t avoidance.
It’s support.
Trying to manage rage in the moment without a plan?
Hard.
So instead, create a simple plan you can lean on when emotions spike.
This might include:
Stepping away from conversations immediately
Moving your body (walk, shake it out, release the energy)
Using a grounding phrase or reminder
Because in those moments—you don’t need more thinking.
You need something to hold you through it.
PMDD rage isn’t just mental—it’s physical.
Which means logic won’t always land in the moment.
Instead:
Focus on your breath (long exhales)
Use cold water (face, wrists)
Move your body
When your nervous system settles…
Your thoughts follow.
This part? It matters.
Because the aftermath of PMDD rage can feel just as heavy as the moment itself.
The:
“I’ve ruined everything”
“I hate that I did that”
But staying in that loop?
Keeps the cycle going.
Instead:
Acknowledge what happened
Repair where needed
Then gently let it go
You are not your hardest moment.
Let’s be honest…
You can read blogs (like this one), save posts, try different tips…
But PMDD isn’t one-size-fits-all.
Your patterns, your triggers, your emotional responses—they’re yours.
And trying to piece it all together alone?
Can feel exhausting.
Managing PMDD rage isn’t about “getting rid” of emotions.
It’s about:
Understanding your patterns
Building tools that work for your body
Having support when things feel intense
Because when you have that?
Everything starts to feel less chaotic… and more manageable.
If you’re reading this and thinking:
“This is me… every single cycle.”
And you’re tired of feeling like you have to brace yourself for what’s coming each month…
I want you to know this:
It doesn’t have to feel this overwhelming.
You can learn how to:
Understand your emotional patterns
Respond differently in those intense moments
Feel more steady in something that’s felt unpredictable for so long
And this is exactly what I support my clients with inside my 1:1 12-week PMDD programme.
Not just surface-level tips…
But personalised tools, guidance, and support to help you navigate the emotional rollercoaster of PMDD in a way that actually works for you.
Because let’s be real—
Trying to figure this out on your own, while you’re already in it?
It’s a lot.
So if you’re ready for support, structure, and something that feels tailored to you…
You can learn more about working together here
https://mariemulcahyhormonehealthspecialist.co.uk/resetmethodforpmdd
And if you’re not quite ready for that level of support yet?
That’s okay too.
Start small.
I’ve created a PMDD Planner to help you begin understanding your patterns in a simple, guided way—so you’re not guessing your way through each cycle.
Cause you don’t have to do this perfectly.
You just don’t have to do it alone anymore.