First of all thanks a lot for the replies! Wow, just wow. I'll reply to a few.
Lady Dragonfly wrote:Avatar, why did you connect escapism with anger or "inability to display anger"? Are you sure these two things are related?
No, I am not at all sure. It's just that severe escapism and never showing anger are two key defining traits in me and I am curious to find out if they are connected.
dragon wench wrote:I suppose I can sometimes have escapist tendencies, but releasing anger is not a problem for me...
Indeed, the reverse is probably true. I have a truly nasty temper, and while I've learned to better control it over the past five years or so, it still sometimes rears its ugly head.
Oh, btw Avatar,
welcome to the forums
It's a funny thing that you seem to want to have more control over it. It's much the same on my end. I don't have any more control over it than you do. I'm just calm when I feel I should enrage. The extremes are always to be avoided I guess, but don't be too quick to consider the ability to really vent anger every now and then a bad thing. Anyway! Thanks for the welcome, I considered posting an introduction thread, but dismissed it earlier. I'll post one in the bio section now though.
Claudius wrote:Lashing out in anger doesn't help it only makes things worse. Patience is a balancing factor. Anger
is impermenant. It has causes. Remove the cause. Ethics, concentration, understanding n intention (ie wisdom)
As far as anger goes I think half the battle is won when you decide that anger leads to suffering. The next step is to apply the antidotes and they can actually be effective in my experience. Even the da lai lama admits that he gets angry, but probably for him it only lasts like 2 seconds haha. It is part of relative practice where you remove obstacles and build up merit.
A second key I think is to realize when you are irritated or angry. Just by this possibility all of the sudden a space is created. A part of you is angry but another part is noticing the anger and that part is pure. So awareness is brought. Its kind of like meditation. You don't say 'god I'm a jerk for being angry' you just say 'aha I'm angry that could be a problem'. I think each individual must experiment with antidotes to see what is working.
Escapism is a fermentation of stress or dissatisfaction as is anger. Another fermentation is craving or having something to cover the stress. Anger is when you want to obliterate something to cover the stress.
"Some people feel patience is showing weakness or pessimism. But, actually, patience shows the strength and clarity of mind,
which are based on wisdom and compassion. Without proper wisdom and compassion, one cannot practice patience."
Khenpo Konchog Gyaltsen Rinpoche
Anger
Anyhow thats my perspective which was influenced by Buddhism.
Now something just for fun:
"Grant me the stubbornness to change what I can, the laziness to accept what I cannot, and enough beer to sit around and
endlessly discuss the difference between the two."
Dick Dunn
I strongly agree with a lot you say, however I really can't claim to follow the high path and have control over this. I am no less a slave to it, than a person that can't help but instantly vent his frustrations on others (though I'm probably far luckier to be on this side). Regardless I think your perspective is thought through and the world would benefit from more people following it. On a sidenote: I tend to "meditate" twice as week just to clear my mind. It has little to with getting rid of anger. I just experience a strong loss of focus and slight anxiety. It could however be related in the end.
Chimaera182 wrote:I tend to be pretty passive and just simmer in my own juices. For example, a few years ago I became convinced a friend of mine had stabbed me in the back. But when I saw him the next day all I did was stand there quietly and listen to him talk, although he did comment on my looking rather pissed. I tend to bottle up my feelings and just don't vent them. Usually if someone pissed me off (and other friends of mine as well) we talk about them behind their
backs and make fun of them, but that hardly constitutes venting anger. But lately...
I have been stuck in classes for the last three semesters with people I cannot stand. All last year, there was a complete and total moron in two of my classes both semesters, and every time he opened his mouth it was like pure stupidity was pouring out and into my ears (I have yet to meet someone who genuinely liked this person). But I held my cool. This is my first semester free of that one, but I got saddled with someone worse. The problem is, although he is very annoying, he is
actually disabled (I don't know how, I just know he can't take his exams with us because he's registered at the Office for Students with Disabilities, and he's mentioned before he was on Ritalin). Ever since January, my friends in the back corner of the classroom will mock him, but last week I actually began to feel pity for him. I mean, he's genuinely messed up, it's
not exactly right to mock the mentally handicapped. But last Friday, I don't know what it was--the lack of sleep, most likely--but I couldn't tolerate him. So when he began saying stupid things, I definitely didn't care if he heard me or not.
Yesterday, he and I nearly came to blows because he angered me so much. We slung insults at one another (I told him his mother should have used protection, which elicited quite a reaction to the one friend in the corner area who was present to hear it [she said she felt sorry for him, but she couldn't stop laughing, either]). Then, this guy threw a paper airplane he found on the floor at me, then claimed proudly that he did it on purpose because he didn't like me (he told me this because, he said, I didn't like him). Insults were pretty much hurled at him, but nothing else came of it. But I can definitely see me getting into a physical row with him, which will of course not be pleasant because a.) I'll probably beat him senseless (I don't mean in a me boasting about my physical prowess way, I mean I will seriously injure him in as brutal a way as possible) and b.) the entire class is going to become sympathetic with him, since I'm basically a healthy person beating on someone
with a disability.
Also, if I'm playing my PS2, I experience gamer rage. I don't know what it is about me, but if I am fighting a boss, I think I'm just prepared to lose so I don't get angry when I die (even if it's 30 times, although I don't think I've ever had it that bad before). But if I am fighting some lower-level things, just regular run of the mill enemies and I die, I get mad.
If it happens often at the same place, I get furious. My PS2 now has a rattling noise inside of it because of the amount of times I have thrown the controller. The piece of plastic that covers the batteries no longer stays in place voluntarily because I broke it; I had to tape it down. Even my mouse bears the scars of my gamer rage.
So yes, I do have trouble expressing my rage.
Quite the story indeed. I'm not sure which games you play but do you feel like you can actually vent your frustrations in games or are they more often the cause of them?
![Big Grin :D](./images/smilies/)
For me they're part of escapism, but there really isn't any anger to vent.
Jeff_31 wrote:I seldom display my anger, for 2 reasons:
-I really seldom feel angry with something. 90% of "problems" are not real ones for me, so I try to avoid conflicts, almost never shout at someone...
I might feel angry when problems deal with personal feelings, and that's about it.
(one of the consequences is that I usually can't stand people who complain all the time)
- My parents taught me to restrain myself and abstain from displaying my anger too much. Must be why I can keep the control of my nerves.
You've given only a short reply, but yours sounds most like my case. I was always taught to avoid conflicts whenever possible, but to fight back when hit (physically). On a sidenote, believe me that is a good philosophy. I believe pacifism, though admirable, is too Utopian to work IRL. But I'm getting off topic sorry! Anyway, Jeff. Do you feel it's possible that you (and indeed me) have been taught to control anger so well you instantly do it subconsciously? It really isn't a choice for me.
Disclaimer: I always just work with what I read (and think I read between the lines). I by no means think I know who you are, what you value or how you think. <3 for replies. It's good to broaden my (and hopefully your) perspectives.