Using Anger Mindfully
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Many of us, especially those on the spiritual path, tend to look at anger as an entirely negative emotion. However, anger used mindfully can be extremely positive, powerful and ultimately healing. Anger is simply energy, and we always have a choice as to what to do with it. Dzogchen Ponlop, in his recent book Rebel Buddha (2010) aptly states:
We usually think of anger … as negative. Ordinarily, our impulse would be either to cut through it and get rid of it or to transform its intense energy into good qualities like clarity and patience….[T]he direct experience of our unprocessed, raw emotions can generate a direct experience of wakefulness. These emotions are powerful agents in bringing about our freedom, if we can work with them properly (p. 144).
So, what do we do that that energy? We are often afraid to feel its raw power, and fear that expressing it will make us seem less than the kind compassionate people we are. However, using anger mindfully will actually awaken our compassion, starting with compassionate lovingkindness toward ourselves.
In fact, many people who are compassionate toward others do not treat themselves with the same degree of compassion, and are self-critical and often depressed. It has been said that depression is "anger turned inward." One of the major goals in treating depression in psychotherapy and in grief counseling is to help clients feel safe to express their anger, and turn the energy of anger outward. "Ex-pressing" anger literally means pushing it out, so that it becomes workable and is not a toxic agent against oneself.
Anger in its pure form, without the "additives" of concept and labeling it as a bad thing, is simply energy. The key is to harness that energy through the use of mindfulness. Mindfulness enables us to recognize the anger without simply reacting -- either spitting it out against another or turning it against ourselves. By looking at it without reacting, we have the ability to choose to use our anger productively.
The following are some suggestions for using anger mindfully:
- Notice how anger manifests in your body -- is it a burning sensation in your heart? A cold tight clenching in the pit of your stomach? A flush of heat in your face or hands? Become as familiar as you can with your own unique physical "early warning signs" of anger so you can catch its energy without reacting.
- As soon as you notice the physical sensation of anger, stop and breathe. Allow the energy of anger to wake you up to what is actually happening at that moment.
- Give yourself permission to feel hurt, abandoned, scared, frustrated or sad with a sense of compassion for yourself. Breathe in light, peace and compassion, and breathe out the dark, heavy sensations of anger without judgment, accepting it just as it is.
- If you notice the anger turning inward against yourself, continue to breathe it out more forcefully. Use your body to keep the energy of the anger outward -- shake it off your hands into the air, stomp it into the ground with your feet -- whatever it takes not to turn that energy against yourself.
- Be curious. Ask yourself: "What is this feeling? What is it telling me?"
- Trust your body to tell you the appropriate course of action. Is there something you need to say to someone who has hurt you, in a way that will forward your own healing and contribute to the growth of the other person and your relationship with him or her? Is it something you can simply let be, making sure not to turn the anger inward?
As Stephen Levine (1987) eloquently says, "the investigation of anger…leads us directly to the love beneath, to our underlying nature. When we bring anger into the area where we can respond to it, where we can investigate it, where we can embrace it, it emerges into the light of our wholeness….Then anger is no longer a hindrance, but a profound teacher."
References
Dzogchen Ponlop (2010). Rebel Buddha: On the Road to Freedom. Boston: Shambhala Publications, Inc.
Stephen Levine (1987). Healing into Life and Death. New York: Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
© 2011. Beth S. Patterson, MA, LPC. All rights reserved.
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About the Author
Beth Patterson, MA, LPC is a licensed psychotherapist and grief counselor in Denver. Beth specializes in grief, loss and life transitions, as well as trauma, depression and anxiety. She is a graduate of the Transpersonal Counseling Psychology masters program at Naropa University. In addition to her private psychotherapy practice, Beth is the Life Care Coordinator and Bereavement Coordinator at SolAmor Hospice in Denver. Beth is a student of Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche, and is a certified mindfulness meditation instructor and teaches courses on Tibetan Buddhism in Denver. She is also a fully trained EMDR practitioner, with advanced training in EMDR and minfulness.
Beth enjoyed a long career as an entertainment atto
ey, and is an honors graduate of Brooklyn Law School. She maintains a small entertainment law practice, counseling musicians and others in the entertainment industry.
For more information, please see www.bethspatterson.com .
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