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On...
Anger and Understanding
Anger can be an appeal for understanding. Everyone wants to be
understood. And when we are not understood we often get irritated
and angry. Without being understood we cannot make meaningful
connection with another person. And since making connections is a
fundamental need we all have, people can get very disturbed when
understanding is lacking – even to the point of violence.
There is a great deal of anger in the world today, both in
individuals and in large groups of people, that is being
expressed through violence rooted in the anger of not being
understood.
Hidden behind our annoyance at not being understood by others is
our unconscious feeling that we do not understand ourselves. In
this unconscious search for our own understanding we reach out to
others to understand us, hoping that this will satisfy the need
we have. We do have a real need to connect with others, but
behind that is the deeper need to connect with our own true inner
self, the soul that we are.
The central energy of soul is love. So what we are searching for
in wanting to be understood is love in one form or another – a
love that supports, affirms and totally accepts who and what we
are. The only love that is unconditional enough to do all that
can only come from soul rather than from others by whom we want
to be understood (and loved). Therefore, we most often feel that
others do not really or completely understand us.
There is something we can do to help ourselves to be understood.
We can learn to be clearer in the way we communicate.
Communication skills are rarely studied or learned, and people
generally are rather weak in being able to communicate clearly.
One excellent resource for this is a book called Non-violent
Communication by Rosenberg.
However, if we do not understand ourselves, no communication
skills will compensate for that lack of self-understanding. And
when we do understand ourselves more fully, who we are then
touches others more directly and automatically. Who we are, and
are aware of, then speaks louder than words. Self-understanding
must be matched with unconditional, impersonal self-love as well.
Otherwise that self does not reveal itself to others. Love is
always the door that opens and reveals what was previously
concealed.
When someone is angry with you, or simply angry, you might ask
yourself if it is because they want understanding, or want to be
supported (empowered) or want to be loved. It will always be one
of these, and often all three. What is your most appropriate
response? Usually you will not love or support without
understanding. So attempting to understand, and assisting the
angry person to understand themselves better, is worth your
undivided attention.
Exercises:
1. Do you have the erroneous belief that as long as you
express your anger you have released it, and don’t need to do
anything more about it? Expressing anger has the benefit of
showing you your anger, but constantly expressing it without
dealing with what is behind it, simply reinforces the angry
habit.
2. What do you do when you get angry? How do you move beyond
it to love, power or understanding?
3. What attitude or action will you take in the future when
someone expresses anger toward you? |
This is one of 150 Soul Perspective articles.
For more articles visit
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Index.

Andrew and Bonnie Schneider are now offering personal interactive email coaching for the 4 Level Soul Journey program. Connect weekly with Andrew and Bonnie on how to develop soul consciousness. Read more about this personal coaching from Andrew and Bonnie Schneider by clicking here.
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