citizenzen
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You get angry and you let it go. You get happy, and you let it go. It makes no difference what it is; you just let it go.
Yup. It'll come back soon enough anyway.
You get angry and you let it go. You get happy, and you let it go. It makes no difference what it is; you just let it go.
Not true at all. If it were so, then there would be millions dead on American streets.And guns can, at times, be very good things too.
It just turns out that the vast majority of time they're wielded destructively.
I'd say, it's only the wisest of people who can channel anger effectively. In the hands of the rest of us it's a dangerous drug.
Not true at all. If it were so, then there would be millions dead on American streets.
Politics is largely about anger and much of the content is in fact a kind of stylized expression of that emotion that helps polarize issues and generate hope by invoking the possibilities for a vindictive triumph over the opposing party.please save political discussions for that forum.
True!Politics is largely about anger.
So anger is like Dorothy's little red shoes. Just tap your heels together and you're home.Anger is a stronger emotion than pride or desire. Once you understand this, you can use it as a means to quiet the other emotions in order to see the situation clearly, without having to resort to the 'heavy handed approach' of blinding rage. {It sounds like a good explanation for my observations from this previous post:
In my experience, the emotions are able to have personality of their own. They are not conscious and not in charge; however they are traveling companions or marriage partners to conscious thought. Sometimes emotions do not understand a situation as soon you understand it consciously. For example: you are insulted yet you don't feel hurt until the next day. Sometimes they understand early -- you find something hillarious and you don't figure out why until later. They can also disagree, and they can be wrong. They can be overbearing and overprotective, as when a person is controlled by one emotion or another. The main thing is they have their own 'Thought process' of their own.There have been several places where I've noted that Buddhist texts often use the term emotion and thought as though they are interchangeable. As it turns out, this is a recognized controversy. In one article, the authors went into some detail as to why they ended up going with one or the other term when translating from the Pali scriptures.
Namaste all,
i'll offer my own views on this in a few posts though i'd like to hear others views before then.
primarily i'm interested in hearing how you deal with anger when it arises, the methods, steps, techniques and so forth which you use to cool the flames.
it doesn't have to be particularly Buddhist
metta,
~v
CPTSD please translate ...?Namaste all,
perhaps it's odd to come back to this now... however it's been relevant in my own life once more. perhaps it should have been more clear to me that there can be underlying reasons for anger which can be difficult to uncover under normal circumstances. trauma and the way it manifests in the human mind is both fascinating and humbling. i've been dealing with a CPTSD issue for most of my life and it wasn't until late in 2010 that i was finally able to get help in a substantial and meaningful manner.
if any of you are dealing with anger issues now, please be gentle with yourselves.
metta,
~v
CPTSD please translate ...?
Now that brings back memories. Living in a box in someone else's building. When my wife and I first got married we lived through a similar situation. Although, TV's weren't as massive as they are today. My solution was to get one of those powerful universal remotes. I use to lean out the window and switch off the neighbors TV when it got too loud. Great fun until he moved and the new tenant started blasting a non-remote stereo! Final solution.... we moved!Thank you. I get insanely angry with the noise of my upstairs neighbours TV. I ring his flat a and ask him to turn a it down, so he turns it down for a while then turns it up again.
Now THERE'S a plan!Now that brings back memories. Living in a box in someone else's building. When my wife and I first got married we lived through a similar situation. Although, TV's weren't as massive as they are today. My solution was to get one of those powerful universal remotes. I use to lean out the window and switch off the neighbors TV when it got too loud. Great fun until he moved and the new tenant started blasting a non-remote stereo! Final solution.... we moved!
http://zugangzureinsicht.org/html/lib/authors/nyanaponika/wheel026_en.html#ill said:Six things are helpful in conquering ill-will:
— Commentary to Satipatthana Sutta
- Learning how to meditate on loving-kindness;
- Devoting oneself to the meditation of loving-kindness;
- Considering that one is the owner and heir of one's actions (kamma);
- Frequent reflection on it (in the following way):
Thus one should consider: "Being angry with another person, what can you do to him? Can you destroy his virtue and his other good qualities? Have you not come to your present state by your own actions, and will also go hence according to your own actions? Anger towards another is just as if someone wishing to hit another person takes hold of glowing coals, or a heated iron-rod, or of excrement. And, in the same way, if the other person is angry with you, what can he do to you? Can he destroy your virtue and your other good qualities? He too has come to his present state by his own actions and will go hence according to his own actions. Like an unaccepted gift or like a handful of dirt thrown against the wind, his anger will fall back on his own head."
- Noble friendship;
- Suitable conversation.
These things, too, are helpful in conquering ill-will:
C. Simile
- Rapture, of the factors of absorption (jhananga);
- Faith, of the spiritual faculties (indriya);
- Rapture and equanimity, of the factors of enlightenment (bojjhanga).
If there is a pot of water heated on the fire, the water seething and boiling, a man with a normal faculty of sight, looking into it, could not properly recognize and see the image of his own face. In the same way, when one's mind is possessed by ill-will, overpowered by ill-will, one cannot properly see the escape from the ill-will which has arisen; then one does not properly understand and see one's own welfare, nor that of another, nor that of both; and also texts memorized a long time ago do not come into one's mind, not to speak of those not memorized.
— SN 46:55
http://zugangzureinsicht.org/html/tipitaka/kn/dhp/dhp.01.than_en.html said:'He insulted me,
hit me,
beat me,
robbed me'
— for those who brood on this,
hostility isn't stilled.
'He insulted me,
hit me,
beat me,
robbed me' —
for those who don't brood on this,
hostility is stilled.
Hostilities aren't stilled
through hostility,
regardless.
Hostilities are stilled
through non-hostility:
this, an unending truth.
Unlike those who don't realize
that we're here on the verge
of perishing,
those who do:
their quarrels are stilled.