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Seeing red !
N. GANESHAN
A king once challenged a zen master to explain the concept of
heaven and hell. But the monk replied with scorn. "You're nothing
but a fool. I can't waste my time with the likes of you".
The king flew into a rage and pulling his sword, yelled, "I could
kill you for your words".
"That is hell" the monk replied calmly.
Startled at seeing the truth in what the master pointed out about
the fury that had him in its grip, the king calmed down, sheathed
his sword and bowed, thanking the monk for the insight.
"And that is heaven" said the monk.
Anger is a temporary madness which leads one to permanent hell.
If someone insults you and you feel angry, always remember that
you have become a slave. That man is your master; he insulted you
and he manipulated your anger. Many people think thatventing
anger gets rid of it. But actually expressing your anger does not
reduce it and may, in fact build it again.
Anger is often inflamed by the thoughts we think when we are
provoked. (Who does he think he is to treat me like that?). The
longer we think about what has made us angry, the more 'good
reasons' and self justifications for being angry. Because
brooding fuels anger's flames.
Seeing things differently douses these flames. We must think
differently to find justification for the behaviour (Eg: May be
he's having a tough day). That line of thought short-circuits the
build up of rage. Redford Williams, a psychiatrist at Duke
University recommends use of self awareness to catch cynical or
hostile thoughts as they arise and write them down. Once angry
thoughts are captured this way, they can be challenged and
reappraised, though this approach works better before anger has
escalated to rage.
Sometimes the best thing you can do about anger is nothing. Going
for a long walk, deep breathing and active exercise change the
body's physiology from high arousal of anger to a low-arousal
state and also these activities distract from whatever triggered
the anger.
Don't be in a hurry to act when angry. Take time to think and
find ways to cool down. As Aristotle said "Anyone can become
angry - that is easy. But to be angry with the right person, to
the right degree, at the right time, for the right purpose, and
in the right way - that is not easy".
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