
Posts Tagged ‘anger’
Keeping Zen in an Angry World
Posted: June 19, 2018 in Life, living, politicsTags: anger, peace, zen

Curious Questions for You
Posted: May 21, 2012 in Life, livingTags: anger, awareness, creativity, Life, living, music, universe, writing
A month ago, a friend had challenged me to sit for an hour, just to concentrate – and maybe pray – about where I want to be, what I wanted to. It was a goal that was fairly open-ended.
I did. I sat on the floor, on my yoga mat (shaddap) with a pillow behind my back. I did this for an hour, at first in mediation, and then thinking/praying. Just going over stuff.
I came to a few realizations.
I’m an angry person. Have been, ever since I was a teenager. People generally didn’t know this, because it’s not obvious. I am. I’m angry. So….this introspection….this navel-gazing, if you will…. sought to figure that out. Why was I angry?
Years ago, my therapist suggested that anger is not a bad thing or a good thing. It just is. (What do you think? Do you agree? I’m really interested in your thoughts on that) . Anyway – that’s the approach I took today. I guess that anger, like pain, might be there for a reason. It’s a messenger, a warning, that all is not right. There’s an imbalance. Something that needs correction.
So…..why was I angry?
I couldn’t approach it head-on as there were no answers there. I just know that sometimes something will trigger me, and I’ll go off on a passionate rant. Last night I ranted on a friend’s blog. When I woke up this morning, I found myself ashamed and regretful. I had told him the truth, but maybe it was overkill. Maybe I didn’t need to show quite so much passion. Truth-telling is enhanced by alcohol, in that booze relaxes your inhibitions. The bad news is that it also inhibits your judgement – and I’m not sure my judgement was where it needed to be last night. Anyway… spilt milk….water under the bridge. Regrets are only good as lessons for the future. They have zero effect on their origins. You can’t take anything back or undo what you did.
So… Anger. Anger happens when you find yourself limited from your potential. Anger happens when you find yourself subject to fear – and once again, inhibited from doing what you know you should do.
And I have been so very angry. Sometimes it comes out as a reaction to whatever excuse will serve at the time. I recognize its deceptiveness by virtue of its overkill – all out of proportion to its catalyst.
I have dreams that I’ve let slide. The time of reflection and meditation made that clear. There’s a need to create. To indulge some creativity. To act. To play music. To write. To – and this is kind of the crux of it all – help people.
It’s tough, being so acutely aware of people who failingly struggle with expectations. I see people who are bound – hogtied – to rules and restrictions that they thought were imposed on them, by their friends, their church, their friends or their workplace. The brutal truth is that they’ve chosen to bind themselves. Whatever the case, the end result is that they’re bound. And they think they’re alone. And I *need* to shine some light.
At the same time, I’ve become acutely aware of the fact that I have so many blind spots too. So I can’t brag about any of this. I can’t pretend I’m not deceived on occasion too. Self-deception is the worst, isn’t’ it? Mostly because you have no idea you’ve done it. No clue that you’ve lied to yourself. It doesn’t even cross your mind.
I find that someone will say something and I’ll realize (hopefully immediately, if I’m lucky) that what they said just bumped me. Like the universe pinched me hard on the bum. And I realize, once again, that I’ve been fooling myself. Damn it – I wish I could be more specific here, so that you had some idea of what I’m talking about.
That hour-long meditation is key: especially in a world where stuff is happening all of the time, and you have no room to think. It’s a time that you schedule, just like anything else, where you sit by yourself, quietly. And listen. And talk out loud too.
I don’t know how it would work for you but here’s how it worked for me: I sat on the yoga mat and closed my eyes. The first thing I did was concentrate on my breathing. I slowed it down and took deep breaths, which I held for a few seconds before letting out. As I did this, I noted the rest of my body: where my limbs were, what they were touching, whether there was any pain or twitches or anything at all. I didn’t judge any of it or try to make anything better. I just accepted it. I also noted the noises from outside of my apartment: not in an irritated way, but just acknowledging that they were there, and accepting them.
After a few minutes of that, once there was a rhythm going, I started deliberately thinking about all of the above. Digging down deep into my motivations. Figuring out what it was that caused me anger. I don’t know why anger was the focus, but once again – I didn’t judge. I accepted it. It might be different for you though: you’ll know if you try this.
Then, I decided that since anger was a signal, I needed to pay attention and figure out what it was telling me. I found a few things: I wasn’t creating. I wasn’t playing piano. I wasn’t writing as much as I needed to do. I was resentful of my job, which takes up so much of my time. I need money to live – and my job was the surest way to do that. I wasn’t physically fit.
There’s an awareness of a need to reach out to people too. That’s the main thing. I thought of how many times I’ve been lifted up by music. Pretty much catapulted out of a threatened depression and dropped into joy – because of music. I’ve done the same thing when I’ve created and played music too. The clearest example was at the death of my father: a man that I truthfully hated for much of my life. Yet, my emotions were ambivalent. He wasn’t a total asshole. He did some things right. He likely did (as we all do) the best he could with what he had. He was limited (as we all are) by so many things, some of which were obvious, and others of which were hidden. At his funeral, some of these truths made themselves apparent. It wasn’t completely conscious though. On the eve of his funeral – for some strange reason – I decided to compose a musical eulogy to him. There were no words – just music. I remember setting up the electric piano at the Catholic altar of the church, and playing the piece. It was a bittersweet number: grounded in pain but interspersed with streaks of joy. I couldn’t articulate it in words at all.
The best thing: it fit, and not just with me.
It was the first time I was conscious of the powerful effects of music.
I need to do that again. There’s a need to meet the mark of the joy, the potential, of music. And of writing. And of being in the best health possible. And of so much more.
Do you dream? Are there things you wish you’d done? Do you find yourself irritated for no apparent reason? Or apathetic?
Are you where you want to be? Are you satisfied? If so – how did you get there? Did it come easy, or did you need to do a lot of introspection? Did you have to make some deliberate choices? How so? How did you do it?
If not – have you accepted your “station in life” as inevitable? If so, why? Is there fear? Of what?
Or are you truly happy with your choices?
One Sunny Morning
Posted: September 11, 2011 in LifeTags: 9/11, America, anger, Bush, Canada, grief
That fateful morning, I was grumbling, because I was late for work. My office was 50 km. (30 miles) away and I had to wait for the next city to city commuter bus.
Funny what you remember, isn’t it? The little things. The bus air conditioning was freezing, almost unbearable. I remember cursing inwardly, because I hadn’t thought it necessary to bring a jacket.
Seemed obviously warm out – the sun was shining in a clear blue sky. I remember trying to figure out what side of the bus I should sit on, to avoid the sunlight once the bus pulled out of the station.
There were maybe about 20 people on the large bus. One of the benefits of catching the late bus. It meant it wouldn’t be necessary to share a seat with anyone. A silver lining in every cloud.
A week before I had purchased a cool set of orange headphones, which served only one purpose: to play AM-FM radio stations. I put them on and dialled into a local rock station, and, ignoring my rapidly lowering core temperature, decided to try and sleep my way to work.
I think we had been on the highway for about ten minutes, when a loud voice interrupted my thoughts. Maybe I had been asleep. Can’t seem to remember. I didn’t catch what was being said, but I opened my eyes and noticed other people looking around and at each other. So I took off my headphones and sat up straighter.
It was the bus driver, and he was using the P.A. system to speak. “A plane has just crashed into the second World Trade Center in New York.”
“Oh’, I thought. “Wow. Must have been a hell of a pilot error. Wonder how many people were hurt. Seems like a tragedy.” Then I thought “but why is he talking about it? It’s just one plane. Probably a four seater Cessna. Why so dramatic?”
“This is the second plane to crash into the towers. I’m being told it’s a terrorist attack.”
I remember blinking in confusion, and then looking at others. It honestly seemed like a bad joke. Like he was playing with the P.A. system. It took a while for the surreal feeling to subside, and my logical mind to catch up. Still, I felt sure he had gotten it wrong.
So I slapped on my headphones and found the news station on the A.M. dial. That’s when it was confirmed, and more information was being broadcast.
I spoke up to the rest of the bus. “There are five terrorist planes in the air right now”.
One lady looked at me. “How do you know?”
“I’m listening to a news station.”
People started leaving their seats and gathering closer. I listened closely and, during the course of the trip heard many false reports. The bus driver made another announcement when a plane crashed into the Pentagon. I told the passengers about the final crash in Pennsylvania.
We still had no idea how bad the attack was, or the scope of it. I think we were all still shocked when we got off of the bus in Toronto.
I walked to work, expecting to have to wait outside the doors for about an hour, while the striking pickets let us through slowly. But when I got there, all of the pickets were down, and the labour dispute was forgotten, ignored.
There was no work that day. Employees all gathered around big TV sets in the foyer, rapt, waiting for more information. We saw people jumping from the towers to escape the flames. Many of us looked in horror, and many more of us cried.
In the days to follow, I stayed near news sources. I was in a bar one night when President Bush made one of his major speeches about the attacks. As God is my witness, I have never in my life felt so angry at what had been done to our American neighbours. I *wanted* those assholes who had done this dead. Needed them to die.
When Bush said the United States was going to take the fight to the terrorists, I applauded along with everyone else in the bar. Stupid, isn’t it? Bush and the Americans couldn’t hear us. Yet we felt compelled to applaud.
I remember thinking that for all of our cross-border disagreements over trade, and free movement across our borders and politics and what-have-you, all of any brotherly rivalry seemed to just fall. Immediately. As if we had never disagreed. You can argue with my brother all you like, and even call him an asshole. But if you bloody his nose, you’ll have to answer to me. That’s how it is with my own siblings, and it seemed that then, even as now, that’s how it is between Canada and the U.S.