Anger is a broad term. — Frotunes
Being angry means different things for different persons. The stoic idea is not about feeling the emotion of anger, but to quickly control it, and to not react destructively from anger towards the object of the anger, mainly because that rarely solves the problem but can often make it worse by impairing rationality. — Frotunes
2:62. But if one comes back in the mind to the earthly objects, then inevitably an attachment to them arises. This attachment leads to the desire to possess these objects, and the impossibility to satisfy this desire produces anger.
2:63. Because of anger the perception gets completely distorted. The distortion of perception causes the loss of memory (the memory about one’s own achievements). And the loss of memory leads to the loss of the energy of the consciousness. By losing the energy of the consciousness, man degrades.
The Stoics thought of it as madness — Wallows
When someone has wronged you, then, I suggest that the appropriate response is to be angry — Wallows
But, don't emotions contain their own set of logic? — Wallows
I'm having a lot of feels recently. — Wallows
Probably most high functioning "professionals" in the market society have anger issues. — Anthony
I have too long been guided by anger. It is a bad feeling that is all consuming. It detracts from the ruler within and is like a festering sore that prevents a person from feeling calm and relaxed.
We all know that anger breeds hatred.
A question. Why are so many people angry? What's so comforting about anger and hatred? — Wallows
Nope, it’s a broad term. Being angry that the bus arrived late, being angry that your team lost, being angry at your wife cheating on you, being angry at not being able to remember a song. Jim being angry at his boss. John being angry at his boss. Natasha being angry at her boss. Angry tiger when it can’t get any food. Angry birds. The subtle anger in anonymous Internet forums. Feeling hangry before lunch. Being hangry before dinner. Raging. Punching the wall. Grinding your teeth. A slight roll of eyes. See? Very broad. Its not a spectrum, no human emotion is. — Frotunes
It looks very broad by your definition of each of those responses being anger — Brett
Why are so many people angry? What's so comforting about anger and hatred? — Wallows
his is an ambiguous sentence, but I’ll address it anyway. In my experience ‘professionals’ (whoever they are) show or display less anger than I see in others. If you’re correct about suppressed emotional issues leading to outbursts of anger then surely they would be displaying acts of anger all the time. How could they not? — Brett
Therefore, what are your thoughts about anger? Isn't it a healthy response towards another person, when they wrong you? — Wallows
Not what I said, this was the chosen term (have to be careful): repressed emotion. — Anthony
Anger is no emotion, it's the absence of it; the result of living with stored up repressed emotion. The sum total of repressed emotion=anger. People who get angry believe their emotions can't be trusted and hence deny them.. — Anthony
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