ED;
To me this kind of posting is not valuable as anyone surfing on the net can 
find it.
Mayka

--- On Fri, 6/5/11, ED <[email protected]> wrote:

From: ED <[email protected]>
Subject: [Zen] Re: Questions
To: [email protected]
Date: Friday, 6 May, 2011, 7:43







 



  


    
      
      
      
Mayka,
The non-sharing (intellectual) post below on 'Buddhism and Anger' conveys far 
more information than dozens of  'sharing' persons, IMO. 
--ED
 
Anger and Buddhism
What Buddhism Teaches About Anger
By Barbara O'Brien, About.com Guide
http://buddhism.about.com/od/basicbuddhistteachings/a/anger.htm



Anger. Rage. Fury. Wrath. Whatever you call it, it happens to all of us, 
including Buddhists. However much we value loving kindness, we Buddhists are 
still human beings, and sometimes we get angry. What does Buddhism teach about 
anger?
Anger is one of the three poisons – the other two are greed and ignorance – 
that are the primary causes of the cycle of samsara and rebirth. Purifying 
ourselves of anger is essential to Buddhist practice. 
Further, in Buddhism there is no such thing as "righteous" or "justifiable" 
anger. All anger is a fetter to realization.
Yet even highly realized masters admit they sometimes get angry. This means 
that for most of us, not getting angry is not a realistic option. We will get 
angry. What then do we do with our anger? 
First, Admit You Are Angry
This may sound silly, but how many times have you met someone who clearly was 
angry, but who insisted he was not? For some reason, some people resist 
admitting to themselves that they are angry. This is not skillful. You can't 
very well deal with something that you won't admit is there.
Buddhism teaches mindfulness. Being mindful of ourselves is part of that. When 
an unpleasant emotion or thought arises, do not suppress it, run away from it, 
or deny it. Instead, observe it and fully acknowledge it. Being deeply honest 
with yourself about yourself is essential to Buddhism.
What Makes You Angry?
It's important to understand that anger is something created by yourself. It 
didn't come swooping out of the ether to infect you. We tend to think that 
anger is caused by something outside ourselves, such as other people or 
frustrating events. But my first Zen teacher used to say, "No one makes you 
angry. You make yourself angry."
Buddhism teaches us that anger is created by mind. However, when you are 
dealing with your own anger, you should be more specific. Anger challenges us 
to look deeply into ourselves. Most of the time, anger is self-defensive. It 
arises from unresolved fears or when our ego-buttons are pushed.
As Buddhists we recognize that ego, fear and anger are insubstantial and 
ephemeral, not "real." They're ghosts, in a sense. Allowing anger to control 
our actions amounts to being bossed around by ghosts.
Anger Is Self-Indulgent
Anger is unpleasant but seductive. In this interview with Bill Moyer, Pema 
Chodron says that anger has a hook. "There's something delicious about finding 
fault with something," she said. Especially when our egos are involved (which 
is nearly always the case), we may protect our anger. We justify it and even 
feed it.
Buddhism teaches that anger is never justified, however. Our practice is to 
cultivate metta, a loving kindness toward all beings that is free of selfish 
attachment. "All beings" includes the guy who just cut you off at the exit 
ramp, the co-worker who takes credit for your ideas, and even someone close and 
trusted who betrays you.
For this reason, when we become angry we must take great care not to act on our 
anger to hurt others. We must also take care not to hang on to our anger and 
give it a place to live and grow.
How to Let It Go
You have acknowledged your anger, and you have examined yourself to understand 
what caused the anger to arise. Yet you are still angry. What's next?
Pema Chodron counsels patience. Patience means waiting to act or speak until 
you can do so without causing harm. "Patience has a quality of enormous honesty 
in it," she said. "It also has a quality of not escalating things, allowing a 
lot of space for the other person to speak, for the other person to express 
themselves, while you don't react, even though inside you are reacting."
If you have a meditation practice, this is the time to put it to work. Sit 
still with the heat and tension of anger. Quiet the internal chatter of 
other-blame and self-blame. Acknowledge the anger and enter into it entirely. 
Embrace your anger with patience and compassion for all beings, including 
yourself.
Don't Feed Anger
It's hard not to act, to remain still and silent while our emotions are 
screaming at us. Anger fills us with edgy energy and makes us want to do 
something. Pop psychology tells us to pound our fists into pillows or to scream 
at the walls to "work out" our anger. Thich Nhat Hanh disagrees.
"When you express your anger you think that you are getting anger out of your 
system, but that's not true," he said. "When you express your anger, either 
verbally or with physical violence, you are feeding the seed of anger, and it 
becomes stronger in you." Only understanding and compassion can neutralize 
anger.
Compassion Takes Courage
Sometimes we confuse aggression with strength and non-action with weakness. 
Buddhism teaches that just the opposite is true.
Giving in to the impulses of anger, allowing anger to hook us and jerk us 
around, is weakness. On the other hand, it takes strength to acknowledge the 
fear and selfishness in which our anger usually is rooted. It also takes 
discipline to meditate in the flames of anger.
The Buddha said, "Conquer anger by non-anger. Conquer evil by good. Conquer 
miserliness by liberality. Conquer a liar by truthfulness." (Dhammapada, v. 
233) Working with ourselves and others and our lives in this way is Buddhism. 
Buddhism is not a belief system, or a ritual, or some label to put on your 
T-shirt. It's this.



Readers Respond: Working With Anger in Buddhist Practice
Read responses (28) 
 
 
--- In [email protected], Maria Lopez <flordeloto@...> wrote:
>
> ED;
> 
> If you search for intellectual zen is the last place for having 
> that. Intellectualising is not the best compliment to say to any zen 
> practicioner.  So you are not complimenting your fellow mates males at all.  
> You are complimenting we women as people who talk about their own experiences 
> and put on the side intellectualism.  Though this is not a real statement 
> either but just your own mental perceptions about men and women. 
>  
> If there is a discussion about a subject all sharing are valuable.  However 
> in Buddhism, Chan and zen what its more valuable is the personal experience 
> about any talked subject.  If you can't offer this in any discussion subject 
> it only means that you are not into the real wave of Buddhism, Chan, zen.  
> And if you are not into the wave how could you get into the discussion of any 
> subject based in personal experience unless you borrow the intellectual over 
> any subject from others?. 
>  
> Mayka


    
     

    
    


 



  



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