on โ24-01-2011 10:15 PM
on โ27-09-2011 03:01 PM
on โ27-09-2011 03:33 PM
on โ27-09-2011 03:42 PM
on โ27-09-2011 05:10 PM
on โ27-09-2011 05:13 PM
on โ27-09-2011 06:14 PM
Good question toon.
I have a few different responses.
I have practiced forgiveness in the past. That helped me move forward. It's a way of coming to peace with the anger.
When I'm chanting lots and coming from a Buddhist perspective I realise anger can be a positive emotion too if it's used constructively rather than destructively. Using anger in a positive way as examples can be just living the best life possible so you can stick it up the person that hurt you. Or using it to learn from your mistakes, using it to advocate for the rights of all people ... and it can mean taking responsibility for the causes we made to attract the person or situation in our lives and changing that part of ourselves.
A meditation that is very useful is to imagine the person surrounded by light and joy and telling them in your mind you are letting them go.
Or, and I do this a lot and trying not too, is eating lots to stuff my emotions down! Not good in the long term. :^O
Don't be afraid of anger. We are human and anger is part of being human. It has two sides and there is a way to turn poison anger into "medicine" anger i.e to do no harm to ourselves and others but to use it to heal.
on โ27-09-2011 06:18 PM
on โ27-09-2011 06:20 PM
on โ27-09-2011 06:20 PM
on โ27-09-2011 06:22 PM
Please send some positive thoughts to my dad tonight. He's in QLD and I was told by my brother in WA that he has just been taken to hospital with a suspected heart attack. I'm not sure what to do. He's 77