Julius_Van_Der_Beak
Fallen
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2008
- Messages
- 22,429
- MBTI Type
- EVIL
- Enneagram
- 5w6
- Instinctual Variant
- sp/so
I think one of the reasons people get to the point where EVERYTHING makes them angry is because so much effort is put into trying to ignore anger in the first place.
Quite possibly, yes.
There’s always a reason for anger. As much as it might seem like that reason is ‘outside’ of you, the anger and the reason for it are actually inside. I think it’s a totally common trap to blame others for some way in which we aren’t taking care of ourselves. Instead of thinking, “this is too petty and it shouldn’t make me angryâ€- realize that it does make you angry and think about why, and don’t expect a ‘why’ that feels correct to surface immediately.
One thing for me.... if I try to think about "why" too early, I think that plays a role in suppressing anger. But it doesn't actually diminish the charge. I just need to write it, but try my damnedest not to fit it into a conceptual framework. At least not at first. I suppose that fits with not expecting a "why" to surface immediately, though.
The ability to let it go (like lady x mentioned in the above quote)- and to realize that everyone is operating from they best place they know how- is something that comes from building acceptance for that anger in the first place. It’s not really a choice someone can make (to ‘choose’ to let it go), it’s an ability that needs to be cultivated.
Thank you. This is what bugs me about people telling me to let it go. I don't find it that easy. If it's because I haven't accepted it first, that's a different story. Same for "not having expectations." I mean, yeah, that makes sense... but I have the expectations. Telling me not to have them doesn't make them go away. It's like telling someone not to get cancer.
It’s not going to happen overnight from a realization. It’s like a muscle that needs to be built from having that realization over and over and over again- until it becomes part of your cognitive autopilot.
Thanks for putting this into a framework I can grasp.
/is hoping she doesn't sound too preachy, but also doesn't really feel like taking the time to figure out how to not sound preachy
You actually articulated that in a way that didn't make me want to throw my laptop against a wall, so thanks.