T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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299.1 | ANGER = TEMPORARY INSANITY? | EDEN::KLAES | Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition! | Mon Feb 02 1987 12:42 | 6 |
| The Greek philosophers considered anger to be a form of temporary
insanity, and thus warned against leaving any angry feelings
uncontrolled.
Larry
|
299.3 | Reactions from the Past | AKOV68::FRETTS | | Mon Feb 02 1987 13:14 | 19 |
|
The experiences I have had along this line started a few years
ago. I began to understand (as many others have too) that many
of my angry responses are based upon past experiences as a child
and really are inappropriate to the current situations. At some
point, I began seeing my child-self in my mind's eye and I could
could see "her/me" having tantrums and whatever. The adult me
did not necessarily have to carry them out. I take the child
into my arms, tell her I love her and that she doesn't have to
react that way and then I just let her sit on my lap and I talk with
her. It is a means by which my past can be healed, and I allow
myself to embrace the parts of me that I had grown to dislike.
And I can allow myself to be angry when it is appropriate. There
are still those times when the two mix together, however, it is
no longer quite the automatic reaction it was.
Carole
|
299.4 | Little Voices Make Big Trouble | CSC32::WOLBACH | | Mon Feb 02 1987 14:17 | 10 |
| Gee, Dave! Your base note was SO descriptive of me, that I
sent it to the man in my life (who also has to deal with
my "monster"). I find that that same monster whispers to
me when I am feeling indecisive or insecure, and really
fuels my fears. Some of the scenarios that are conjured up
in my mind would put a fiction writer to shame!! THen pretty
soon the voice of logic and reality start talking to me and
I realize how much I am overreacting.
|
299.6 | ANGER IS YOU, NOT SOMEBODY ELSE | EDEN::KLAES | Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition! | Mon Feb 02 1987 14:43 | 10 |
| Is it good to separate feelings of anger from yourself?
Personifying this emotion may be good to observe it better, but
to make it a separate entity alos seems to me to be an avoidance
of responsibility for one's anger. Emotions may not be us in whole,
but they are part of us, and I think dealing with the fact that
anger is occuring because of us and not some "creature" is a much
better way to deal with this emotion.
Larry
|
299.7 | Temper??? Who, me??? | ANGORA::WOLOCH | The girl next door... | Mon Feb 02 1987 15:23 | 5 |
| Thanks for bringing this up, Dave. I tend to occassionally
have a bit of a temper and I try to understand why I react
the way that I do. I agree with another note that sometimes
I feel past experiences stirred within my mind.
|
299.9 | Anger <> Sadness | HUDSON::STANLEY | Uncle John's Band | Mon Feb 02 1987 15:45 | 14 |
| Personally, I don't feel that my anger is seperate from myself, just an
ugly part of myself. I have not yet found out what causes my temper tantrums.
There are certain times when I feel more likely to lose my temper. A specific
event might make me blow up one day and another day have no effect. On alot
of these days when I'm more likely to lose my temper, I can't for the life
of me figure out what it is that caused this mood. My wife will ask me,
"Did you have a bad day?". And I think, "No, it was an ok day". It really
bothers me to be so grouchy when nothing negative really happened that day.
I don't know about others but I think that I express sadness as anger. You
know, men aren't supposed cry and all that. Anger will not release the
pressure of sadness. Does anyone else feel that their sadness is sometimes
expressed as anger?
Dave
|
299.10 | Anger & Sadness | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Mon Feb 02 1987 15:57 | 11 |
| That seems to be a common connection. When you think about it,
it kind of makes sense, that pain and anger are connected. Something
causes you pain, and you become angry at what caused the pain.
Sort of analogous to kicking the rock you stubbed your toe on. (I'll
teach you to hurt me, you piece of ____ you!)
The inner child is the one who has those type of responses most
frequently, it seems. I think highly Carole's suggestion of imagining
taking the child in your arms to comfort him/her.
Marcia
|
299.12 | | INK::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Tue Feb 03 1987 08:42 | 11 |
| Anger is part of one's self, yet each of us contains complexities.
When one or another aspect of ourselves is most significant [I
shun the word "dominant"], particularly in a situation that is
conducive to the operation of that aspect, it's hard to control.
Anger has its place: in the distant past, it was a survival tool.
Often, however, in our more complex societies, it manifests itself
as a violent reaction to an unacceptable level of frustration.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
299.14 | Anger vs. love | ORION::HERBERT | Wherever you go, there you are! | Tue Feb 03 1987 11:06 | 40 |
| Wow...if there was anything we could all relate to, it's the subject
of the base note. I've read a lot about anger and came across a
lot of explanations for it. Here are the ones that come to mind
immediately:
- Anger has certain payoffs (we think), and that's what keeps
us devoted to using it. Payoffs such as, having an excuse
for doing something you wouldn't do normally because you're
out of control..."I didn't know what I was doing, I was angry."
Or using it for intimidation when you want to get your way.
Or using it so someone will feel sorry for you because you're
SO upset. I know this reason is the hardest to accept in
ourselves, but we really are that devious.
- Anger is also a habit learned from childhood. We watched adults
use anger to force their way, and we learned that this was what
we needed to do also, as humans. Like all bad habits, abusive
anger has to be unprogrammed...but it IS possible.
I feel that the biggest reason of all for anger is not loving
ourselves. Because when you love yourself, you are kind, and patient,
and understanding...and there is no room, or reason, for anger.
You can't love someone else if you don't love yourself, so when
you think it's someone else that is MAKING you mad, it's really
that you're just not loving yourself.
One of the best ways to settle anger is to think of loving yourself.
Unfortunately, you've got to agree to do this in the first place
before it can work. I don't always do that (even though I may remember
it) because I WANT to be angry...and I WANT to make a big scene.
We're all actors and it's fun to be dramatic. It's exciting. The
only trouble is when you forget that you were just "acting" and
you become convinced of your own great performance. It helps to
acknowledge that you're WANTING to be angry, and that you're just
going to GO FOR IT. Then scream and yell and make a big fuss, and
the more often you do this, the shorter and shorter these "out of
control" states will be...because they'll be boring and less exciting
when you know you could be choosing something else...like happiness.
Jerri
|
299.15 | PSYCHOLOGY NOTESFILE? | EDEN::KLAES | Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition! | Tue Feb 03 1987 12:20 | 7 |
| This topic has given me an idea - would someone want to create
a PSYCHOLOGY Conference? I don't believe there is anything like
it in VAXNotes, and the other Notes on the human condition focus
more on the biological effects.
Larry
|
299.16 | View from the other side | TOOTER::GARY | inclined to wear bedroom slippers... | Tue Feb 03 1987 12:27 | 27 |
| As a child I had a really TERRIBLE temper, I would get so angry that I
would just flail out at anything thing that upset me. Growing older I
learned that this was not socially acceptable and so I suppressed the
anger. This made me a very unhappy person, all of the surpess anger turned
inward, I did not like myself very much at all. After a year of therapy I
learned to see and address my anger directly, when I am angry now I throw
I temper tantrum, sometimes I yell a bit sometimes I break most of the
glasses in the house :-). But no longer do I push my anger in and I like
myself alot more now. When I get angry now it's like a thunder storm loud
but not very long. When it's all over, it's over I do not hold a grudge as I
would before. And while the ideal might be never to become angry at all I
don't think do many of us are able to do that. And to be perfectly honest
I think that anger has it's place, it's part of the balance of what we are
as people. For instance waste makes me angry, waste of resources, waste of
time, waste of life. I get angry when someone I care about is not being treated
unfairly. I even get angry at snow, "D#@!, snow if I see another inch...", I
channel this anger into my snow shovel :-). These I feel are appropeate uses
of anger.
No if I were going to pick on some emotions that I would be better off
without it would be things like envy, greed, and apathy.
-vicki
p.s. As an aside, I think my way of expressing my anger is very typical of
my sign (Leo). All sound and fury and signifying not much. What do other
people think?
|
299.17 | POSITIVE USES OF ANGER | GRECO::MISTOVICH | | Fri Feb 06 1987 13:37 | 41 |
299.18 | The Other End of the Spectrum | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Fri Feb 06 1987 16:59 | 39 |
| I'd be interested to hear from people who experience the other end
of the anger spectrum, where both the expression _and_ the feelings
themselves are more muted.
I find myself wondering if the tendency to anger is somewhat like
a person's pain threshold; some people have a very high threshold,
others have a low one.
I have suffered, like the respondent in 299.17, from an upbringing
that stifled anger expression completely. So I do have problems
expressing it. But I have also discovered, to my surprise, that
I just don't anger that easily. This seems traceable, in my case,
to:
o slow responses. This applies not only to anger, but to all
my other feelings. I just don't "react" in time. If I receive
an insult or injury, I go into a reaction that more closely
resembles shock. It takes me usually a few days to have figured
out what I felt in the situation.
o no translation from pain. Dave wonders if pain and anger are
connected, if anger is pain somehow translated. I think this
can be very true in many cases. And when I receive an emotional
wound, the pain remains in its pure form; it almost never
"transforms".
o empathy. When another person displays behavoir that might excite
me to an anger response, I find that I tend to identify with
the pain (s)he is in. And this empathy tends to short-circuit
my anger. Clumsy service people, for instance. I had those kinds
of jobs while in college, and they were sheer torture to me.
When I see one either klutzing out or acting up, it recalls
to me the anguish I used to go through, and I don't find myself
feeling angry at all. I will think to myself, "gee this person
is really slow/rude/etc." but the thought inspires no anger.
Any other experiences from this end of things?
Marcia
|
299.19 | Taking time for yourself | MIST::IVERSON | | Sat Feb 07 1987 17:00 | 21 |
|
Anger... Rage... I find it all so overwhelming at times.
I love my kids but I can also get so angry at them.
I definately agree that it is all a function of fustration,
and stress getting the better of me.
What works for us is time to ourselves. Thom NEEDS his bicycle
rides. His anger flairs at the drop of a hat if he doesn't
physically dispell all that pent up frustration. I need to
get out of the house and be with people-other adults-who
have common interests.If I don't get this-#$&@**%$#!!!
I also agree that loving oneself is very important in dispelling
anger. When I feel secure, I can handle just about anything the
kids dish out because I don't feel responsible for their anger.
We all just do our best at the time-(at this very moment Emily
just spilled her apple juice all over the floor. I just mopped it
yesterday.@@@@%$#&*!)Gotta go mop the floor.
Renee
|
299.20 | The monster is always with me | BASHER::HALL | So long and thanks for all the fiche | Wed Feb 11 1987 22:09 | 27 |
| Having just re-read this reply, I have inserted this paragraph
to define a little more clearly both the point I'm trying to get
across and my personal definition of "Anger". To this end I
have disregarded what some may describe as "righteous anger" or
indignation, and below is a comment on what I would call "Black anger"
perhaps evil is too strong a word, but it will do. The use of the
discription "The monster" in preceeding replies is a good one, so
I have continued to use it here.
Do we learn to control out anger, as was stated earlier?
.14 mentions anger being a "Habit learned from childhood"
What if it is tolerance that the beast within learns to control?
I wonder...............Do we learn anger, or do we learn tolerance?
Do we "Let the monster out"? or does the monster hold the keys?
I am ever aware of the monster in the dark within me, but I cannot
always see the light. The monster finds it convenient to rest and
watch most of the time, but his power and presence is by far the stronger.
I do not recall if this was always so, am I so different or is this
just another angle on the subject? I guess what I am asking here is
"Why do you presume that humanity is basically good?" I suspect
that it may not be.
Chris Hall
(New to this file with a lot of reading to do)
|
299.21 | Re: .20 | ORION::HERBERT | Thinking is the best way to travel. | Fri Feb 13 1987 11:11 | 33 |
| Re: .20
I don't know if it's as much a question of "controlling" anger, as "choosing"
out of it. I believe that we have choices (as long as WE think we do). If
you don't think you have a choice, then you don't.
I believe that anger is simply a response to not being able to control
something.
Re: your question "Why do you presume that humanity is basically good?"
Although you referenced my reply earlier in your reply, I'm not sure if you're
asking this question of me or just "anyone" who believes it, but here is my
answer to that question... I believe it because that's what I want to believe
and that's the kind of world I want to live in. For a long time, I believed
that people were basically bad, and I was always seeing situations in which
that was true. But I started melting into that, feeling very lost, and
hopeless, and unhappy. My attitude was...this is a crappy world and it's a
big mistake that I'm here. I was filled with self-hate, resentment, and
confusion.
After having enough of that...to the point of thinking I couldn't stand another
minute of it, I decided to try and find a way out. I read lots of books and
used the bits and pieces of them that seemed right to me, gradually building a
new attitude of love and acceptance of this world, rather than hate and
resistance. I think this world can be a lot of things to a lot of people.
It can be a wonderful, happy experience...or it can be a real drag. Money,
power, fame, etc., have nothing to do with it because there are happy people
with everything, and happy people with nothing. Likewise, there are unhappy
people with everything, and unhappy people with nothing. That's why I think
it's a choice...and therefore, humanity just basically IS. Neither good or
bad, really. Just IS...with choices. That's my belief right now.
Jerri
|
299.22 | sounds good to me | MIST::IVERSON | There's a seeker born every minute | Fri Feb 13 1987 14:59 | 6 |
|
Re:21
Jerri. You have a great way af saying things. A real gift.
Renee
|
299.23 | TOLERANCE DOES NOT EQUAL GOOD | GRECO::MISTOVICH | | Mon Feb 16 1987 12:46 | 26 |
299.24 | Walking the tightrope | GOBLIN::MTK_TOM | Mad?! Yes, I'm mad! But I'm also ____! | Tue Feb 17 1987 18:10 | 56 |
|
A rule-o-thumb that I recall when I find I'm feeling hostile
is that anger often is a screen against hurt. For me, it's
the temptation is to take this strong emotion, label it
righteous anger and aim it outwards -- rather than face it,
acknowledge it as hurt, and delve inwards. To suddenly be hurt
without warning is a lonely experience. When others are around,
we are suddenly witness to an internal tragedy that we cannot
describe (typically -- more and more my friends and I are able
to acknowledge such things openly and compassionately, and
immediately). "Not Fair!" cries my little internal movie
critic, the little guy who's expecting my life to be a
comedy-love story.
And when I find someone being angry with me, or with another,
I aim to comfort them as persons hurt -- rather than agree
with them or argue with them or, maybe worst, judge them for it.
I'm building myself from the inside out now. I'm building my
responses, and tuning them to my committment to others. That is,
(the timing is perfect: lo, an example!) last night I spoke with
a friend of mine who just broke up with my best friend. With
regard to the troubles they have been having, I have always
operated from the ground called "she's to blame." ("He" is the
"best friend.") So I have been hostile with her, in my attitude
more than my words. So I called her last night to check how
she was handling the break up -- and I had an internal struggle
through the whole conversation. On one hand, the temptation
to be right: "That's right, you broke up because of all those
things wrong with you..." On the other, my committment to my
friend to be for her a compassionate listener. From moment
to moment, I guided my thoughts, listening to them for when
I was being uncharitable and letting those thoughts pass away
until I could be caring again. Up and down. I got a one
heck of a close look at what I have at stake with my attitudes,
and how careless I am with them. Through the conversation, I
kept an eye on myself, and the one valve I kept as tight a
control over as I could was my mouth. Whatever I thought could
become either a brick in her face or a clearing in her jungle,
depending on whether I spoke from hostility or compassion.
I got to see what a LUXURY it is to hold a negative opinion
about someone else. It seems to me now that it is like enjoying
a pleasure that causes another person to die. "But they don't
REALLY die!" calls out my negative side, "they'll get over it."
It's like the choice another person in this conference described,
between "life is good" and "life is bad." In the choosing, so it
becomes so. For myself, I see now that the quality of my life, and the
good or harm I do people, hang in the balance of what I choose to be my
guiding principles. Either "you are a child of the universe as I am,
and I love you" ...or "they'll get over it."
Thanks all, for the chance to talk about this.
Tom Kelleher
|
299.25 | Another view on anger.. | HULK::DJPL | Now vould be a good time, Scotty! | Mon Mar 02 1987 19:52 | 30 |
| What this topic goes to show is that anger and rage take many forms
and need different ways of being handled.
With me, I have been cognisant of 'Andrew' for almost 2 1/2 years.
I knew I had a 'dark side' for some time. Being a 'little fat kid'
at the time meant getting a lot of abuse and not being able to do
anything about it. I kept submarining my attempts at letting anger
out because I was 'supposed to turn the other cheek'. This attitude
kept up for several years until one night.
I caught my wife sleeping with another man. I don't remember much
about that incident other than seeing this enraged madman take control
of my body and, more importantly, my voice. My rational self was
helpless to do anything but sit back and watch.
Since then I have come to grips with what is apparently something
that has been subjugated for so long, it has become like another
self. There is very definitely a voice in the back of my head
espousing 'his' views. Fortunately, although it comes from the
same place, the tone of voice is different from my 'intuitive higher'
voice.
Now I have been able to carry on a conversation [if that seems
possible] with 'Andrew'. Since "allowing him to air his views"
I have never had a real problem with losing my temper. Not to say
I haven't punched a couple of doors since, but it appears that I
have found my way of venting some of the anger that has been building
up for 20 years.
[Gawd I loooove this file!]
|
299.26 | Quotes On Anger | ACE::MOORE | | Thu Sep 06 1990 17:20 | 15 |
|
Anger is just one letter short of danger.
He is a fool who cannot get angry, but he is a wise man man who will
not.
Never strike a child! You might miss and hurt yourself.
Hot words never resulted in cool judgement.
He who has a sharp tongue soon cuts his own throat.
RM
|