I've noticed 2 strengths of yours raven123..
intellectualization and very passionate anger/rage/frustration.
Going to extremes can have it's pitfalls, but if used properly, they can be an extremely useful tool.
I see intellectualization as a great way to be objective and rational. This is very important when your nervous system is exhausted and emotions are clouding your judgement. It is very useful to filter out BS and get to what's real and true for you at that moment.
The downside of it, as you already know, is that it can also be a great way to avoid life, numb yourself, or dissociate from your emotions. It can be quite useful as a temporary defense mechanism or coping strategy. But as a standard all the time life strategy and approach, it can make life feel very hallow and empty, and also it can be quite energetically draining to the nervous system.
You need to discover some place or way when you can let your guard down, rest and recover, relax.... being stuck in survival mode 24/7 may be an over-reliance with defense mechanisms, avoidance techniques, numbing strategies, etc. Which seems to be the safest and most effective in the short term, it's just damn exhausting in the long term. The nervous system needs to rest, recover, digest.
Passionate rage/anger/frustration -
The reason why you are having trouble making sense of your feelings is because rage has a way of covering up or masking other lighter emotions. It's a great attention getter, it's an emotion that calls for action and total attention. So it's quite normal to be totally enveloped and overtaken by rage (anger, frustration, bitterness, resentment)... Within that rage is information, insights and wisdom. There are very important messages that your body, nervous system, and subconscious is trying to share with you, in high priority, with such intense passionate emotions. With varieties of anger it typically is trying to tell you that a boundary has been crossed or broken. The anger is trying to point out a recent place of vulnerability from a broken boundary that wasn't honored or protected. The lesson to be learned is to act to protect your boundary, understand what happened , look at any injuries you received, protect yourself, and then tend to the wounds and heal up.
There is great energy that can be harnessed through passionate emotions.
..... but there is also a downside with anger and rage.. they also can be over-used as a life strategy instead of a temporary defense mechanism or coping strategy.... anger is an empowered variation of hurt, pain and vulnerability, in a life or death situation, we can't be focusing on our hurt, we have to act to defend ourselves or run away to safety (fight or flight).. Anger gives us that boost of energy to do that.... BUT it also naturally distracts us from acknowledging our pain and hurt, so it can be very easy to just hide in variations of anger, and avoid 'negative' or 'weak' type feelings of hurt, pain, vulnerability, helplessness, hopelessness, etc. So most people take anger and then add some story of blame, to project that anger towards something external..... then it turns into resentment (anger towards person(s)) or bitterness (anger towards life, god, self, unknown)... that's a great way to avoid the underlying pain, hurt and vulnerability; but it leaves you trapped with that pain, because it's now projected towards something outside of you, then it becomes like an emotional cancer, eating away your insides. Ultimately to heal, that pain inside of you needs to be addressed.
..... just sharing my opinions, wish I could have made it more concise.. it's still difficult talking about this stuff.. I can feel my arms and shoulders trembling now...