There's a great scene in Synecdoche, New York, which, despite there being this article about this speech I'm going to be talking about (below), I think still is a movie most people haven't heard of. Not seen, I mean. Heard of.
Anyway, the above (now) scene is probably the most prepackaged in the whole movie (although, jeez, this movie has a lot of moments that you could point to), in terms of things you could just watch without any context, whatsoever.
And that priest character (because all of the characters in this scene, aside from the people at the table, maybe, and a couple of crew members, or something, are actors in the stage play of Philip Seymour Hoffman's character's life, which keeps evolving as it includes more things, from his life) stands there and says, before any of the other emotions, "I'm so angry."
Or, rather, I feel so fucking angry. And he is preaching to the choir. Aside from the fact that everybody says Amen, at the end of it, including the director, Caden, played by Seymour Hoffman, whose last name is "Cotard," by the way, which just carries all sorts of connotations, all sorts of feelings. Aside from that, he is preaching to the choir of the World, because I think everyone is angry.
And I've already gone too far. You don't point to everyone around you. I'm not saying this from some kind of bullshit humble but actually snide (and thus egoic) shit, I'm saying it from a case, of watch your back. Of look at the individual elements. You are not everybody else, except perhaps in some sense that is spiritual, but in any case, if you're looking for solace, then it's not everyone else is Angry, it's me.