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Assertion, Anger or Aggression?
Self-Help
Behavior Modification
Testimonials Behavior
Assertion, Anger or Aggression?
It was the spring of 1986 when I first realized I was a murderer. This startling realization came to me as a result of a freshman-level college sociology course, which I firmly thought I should be exempted from having to take. I was in my mid-thirties when I finally got around to finishing my undergraduate degree. And I felt I had already learned many fundamental concepts from my professional life, from extensive reading, and from other coursework along the way. So picture me sitting in class with a bunch of 19-year-olds, with a tiny chip on my shoulder, but putting up with it to get through in the quickest and most efficient way possible.
So it was quite a surprise that the beginning of my personal awakening began in this ordinary class on yet another ordinary day. It happened when the sociology professor spent an entire period going over and over the difference between assertion and aggression. He said that assertion was getting what you want without hurting or harming someone and that aggression was getting what you want by harming or attacking in some way. Attack could be anything: name-calling, making someone feel guilty, putting someone down, saying something unkind, forcing someone to do something they didn't want to do, physical abuse, anything. For some reason, the professor's message was particularly meaningful to me. By the end of the class period, I knew in my heart that I was a very aggressive person, although I had never thought of myself in this way before. I knew with full certainty that many of my thoughts, words, and actions were intended to emotionally hurt and sting.
At the end of the day, I drove myself home from school. I vividly remember cruising down the Massachusetts Turnpike and crying my heart out with the horror of seeing myself as someone who deliberately hurts others -- a killer.
After my next sociology class, I stayed late to tell my instructor how upset and disturbed I was about seeing myself in such an ugly, revealing light. But he said there was no reason to be upset because the realization was highly beneficial. "Don't be sad," he told me. "Be glad. You can't change what you are not aware of."
It's not possible to make the choice to be a loving being until you first recognize your own loveless mistakes. The ability to see your own anger is critically important. The rub is that we don't want to see ourselves in this unflattering light, so we deny and resist it with all our might. Otherwise, anger is relatively easy to recognize. The absence of anger is love, and the presence of anger -- no matter how sweetly it's disguised or how justified it may feel -- is not love. All anger is an attack directed externally against another. Anger takes many forms: irritation, lack of patience, refusal to communicate, holding a grudge, talking behind someone's back, insolence, making fun of someone, manipulation of another, criticism, blame, complaints, harsh words, yelling, hitting, rage, and whatever else you can think of. Even so-called mild irritation is a little temper tantrum -- a tiny rage in disguise. How dare you bother me! How dare you ask me to wait! How dare you tell me no!
Sometimes anger is subtle. It appears rational. It's packaged in kind words. It's even presented in a helping context. "This hurts me as much as it hurts you, but I'm doing it in your own best interest." Anger, however, is anger. And it doesn't really matter how we experience or express our anger. What matters is whether or not we choose to leave the anger in our mind once we become aware that it's there. Most of us indulge our angry thoughts. We dwell on them. Angst over them. And then finally, we express them -- in a wide range of ways. This is why it's so very useful to think of any form of anger as murder. The term "murderer" is a shocking reminder that no matter how seemingly insignificant or mild the attack may be, the unconscious intent to kill is ever-present. Who hasn't thought "I'm going to kill you" when vexed by people who don't do what they're supposed to do? We kill drivers on the road who annoy us. We kill children and spouses when they disappoint. We kill our parents for their imperfections in raising us. We kill our friends for stepping on our toes. We kill our pets for being a nuisance. These mindless and seemingly harmless idiomatic expressions are confusing because they lead us to accept the notion that figurative killing is okay.
Our legal, social, and religious systems reinforce our confusion about anger and killing because anger is not perceived or dealt with in an uncompromising way. Instead, anger is categorized into a hierarchy that attempts to measure the harm that is done to self or another whenever anger is expressed. Displays of anger are then either tolerated or punished based on the perceived degree of severity that's witnessed. So, for example:
If we're good citizens and follow most of the rules, we can engage in so-called milder forms of attack without drawing any negative attention to ourselves and without getting into legal trouble. Therefore we think we can attack a little and get away with it. And, in fact, we do it every day. Even more, many self-help and human psychology experts put a positive spin on anger. Anger is typically viewed as an ordinary expression of healthy living. Everybody feels angry, so therefore it's normal and it's right. We are taught to use our anger constructively, or at least as an inspiration. Anger can right wrongs. It can enhance self-esteem. It can be the inspiration and the catalyst that makes things happen. It puts people who've been bad or wrong in their place. These perceived benefits and advantages of anger are tremendously alluring. Can you begin to get a small sense of how and why we are so confused about the nature of anger and attack?
The objective of this discussion is not to suggest we should feel bad about ourselves for feeling angry. Or that we should trash everything that we've learned from human psychology. Rather, it's to draw your attention to our basic problem: the rules of our legal system, the morals of our social and religious systems, and the lessons we learn about expressing our emotions are not always in sync with the code of our Higher Self. Our Higher Christ Self would have us know that all hate is the same, and that no matter what form it takes, it's all equally destructive. There are no degrees of hate that are okay. There are no kinds of hate that are okay. There are no situations where hatefulness is the answer to a problem. In contrast, our worldly system would have us believe there are degrees of hate. That some hateful acts are worse than others. And that there are certain situations where a little hate might be useful and good.
Many people on a spiritual path are caught somewhere in the middle, with one foot in each world. We intuitively recognize the uncompromising and radical truth about love and the absence of love. Yet we still embrace the ways of the world, or at least we partially embrace them. In short, we want to have it both ways. We want to awaken to our own greatness, and we also want to be petty and keep our hate -- though maybe just a little of it. It's highly likely that you will attempt the experiment of having it both ways many, many times. Ultimately, however, there's only one conclusion: this strategy does not work. This is because the presence of hate in your mind blocks awareness of your Higher Self. The presence of hate in any form also makes you feel bad about yourself and others. Therefore, every time you make the choice to be angry, you simultaneously make the choice to be unhappy. Until we make the choice to be a loving being, and only a loving being, we will continue to make decisions to be angry rather than happy.
Sit quietly and repeat the following phrase over and over in your mind for a minute or two. Say the phrase throughout the day whenever you notice you're annoyed, disturbed, or offended for any reason. Nothing is too little.
I could see peace instead of this.
This article was excerpted from the book:
The Book of Love
by Karen Bentley.
Reprinted with permission of the publisher, Big Heart Books. ©2002. http://www.big-heart.com
Info/Order this book.
About the AuthorKaren Bentley is Big Heart. A highly gifted author and in-demand speaker, she is the nationally acclaimed creator of the Awaken Your Passion book and seminar series. Her goal is to revolutionize the way people think about love, to show how spiritual love is the source of all happiness and peace. Formerly, Karen served as the director for The Center for Forgiveness and the editor of The Spirit's Voice, a magazine for spiritual seekers. Visit her website at www.big-heart.com.