Anger’s
World
So
why do some people choose to deal with the world in an aggressive,
hostile fashion?
- Anger
is seductive. It provides its possessor with a physical and
emotional rush which masks its severe strain on the body and
mind
- The
angry person believes himself to be right, and, therefore, justified
in behaving in an angry and oppressive manner to compel others
to accept the situation as he sees it.
- Anger
may be a life raft for the self-esteem of a person who otherwise
feels powerless. Better to be angry than ashamed.
- Some
people equate anger with aggression, perhaps due to a harsh
upbringing, in which they perceived people to be either an oppressor
or a victim
- In
the short term, it can be successful
Hostile,
angry people often win confrontations because they attach great
importance to matters that most people don’t care enough about
to turn into major conflicts. They may also imagine that their
anger achieved a goal that they would just as easily have been
won by a polite request.
However,
they set a trap for themselves by their behavior. Their perpetual
anger gets them constantly into conflict situations, which reinforce
their perception of the world as a hostile, negative place. Anger
thus becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy, creating the hostility
and rejection it anticipates.
Most
of us enjoy the luxury of not having to confront life-or-death
circumstances on a regular basis. So what remains to make us angry?
Substitute “ego-threatening” for “life-threatening,” and an entire
new world of anger-inducing opportunities emerges.
We
perceive threats in anything that:
·
Belittles our thoughts, beliefs, feelings and needs
·
Threatens the success of an endeavor to which we are strongly
committed—financial achievement, reputation, significant personal
relationship, etc.
·
Confirms our paranoid belief that our failures are caused by others
·
Demands a change that we view as a loss
What
all these goads to anger have in common is that they challenge
the perception we have of ourselves and our place in the human
pecking order. The source of the anger-inducing frustration is
the assumption that attainment of our goals requires that others
change their behavior or perceptions.
At
the root of this assumption lies a failure to see other people
as free agents. Instead, the angry person sees them as objects—as
means or impediments to his or her goals. Any behavior that thwarts
his desires thus becomes a deliberate act of sabotage or an incompetent
frustration of his progress. Even the most short-tempered person
never gets angry at the people behind him in a traffic
jam, even though their relationship to the situation is identical
to that of the people in front of him. The angry person’s moral
imperative is that people ought to get out of his #&!@%+ way!
Most
of us see our goals as something we want, recognizing that
those desires take no precedence over those of our neighbors.
The angry person sees them as needs, uniquely worthy of
recognition and fulfillment.
It
would be easy to dismiss this worldview (and its possessor) as
arrogant or infantile. But, more charitably, it can be viewed
as a learned response to life, possibly born of early trauma and
subject to modification.
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