Survivor2Thriver
Gold Member
Intent is everything.
Spot on!
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Intent is everything.
I may have misread what you said, but it seemed as though you were saying that people who express anger are always trying to hurt someone, and I don't agree with that.I'm not clear what you are saying we should agree to disagree about here Philippa, could you explain?
it seemed as though you were saying that people who express anger are always trying to hurt someone, and I don't agree with that.
that somebody else should be hurt, because the angry person is hurting.
You also said this in your Original Post, so it gave me the impression that you think that everyone you see who gets angry is trying to hurt the other person. It's possible I got that wrong, but from your words, that's how it comes across to me.The justification seems to be that they are annoyed or hurt by the way someone else has treated them, and that makes it ok for them to hurt others.
So, how would you suggest dealing with it, if you actually are angry with a person? I think we need to work at matching reactions to the situation, but, if you're angry, why NOT tell the person that you are?I'm saying that it's never right (with the exception of being in physical danger), to express it by firing it at other people.
.it's the way you do it and the language that is used that determines whether you are being abusive, rude, bullying etc..Definately yelling and screaming is unacceptable.
This seems like shaky ground to me. People can be extremely nasty, damaging and abusive based on their blame and anger, whilst not swearing or shouting. The same thinking is behind it - that somebody else should be hurt, because the angry person is hurting.
So, how would you suggest dealing with it, if you actually are angry with a person? I think we need to work at matching reactions to the situation, but, if you're angry, why NOT tell the person that you are?
So, how would you suggest dealing with it, if you actually are angry with a person? I think we need to work at matching reactions to the situation, but, if you're angry, why NOT tell the person that you are?
@Philippa It's just saying that people expressing an angry blaming disposition in a quiet way can be equally nasty, damaging and abusive as someone shouting and screaming. People express it in different ways, but the drive behind the expression is still anger and that somebody else needs to recieve it.
I used to feel this way as well, in my teens. I didn't see the point in getting angry. I later realised that I had a lot of supressed anger in me that I wasn't aware of and it needed to come out. I also learned that it has an important message and gift for me to learn. If there was no anger we wouldn't have activists channelling theirs to bring about change in the world.I don't 'do' anger and never have. As a consequence, seeing others angry absolutely terrifies me as I cannot understand the emotion.