Anger and Emotional Regulation

You speak about healing. You speak about love. But if we are honest, any serious conversation about loving our neighbor must include a conversation about anger.

Loving your neighbor requires learning how to feel anger without allowing it to become harm.

For much of my life, I carried anger. I wore it like armor. Looking back, most of it did not originate as anger at all. It came from fear. From confusion. From not knowing. Some of it came from what I call the poor little me syndrome. The victim mentality was easier than sitting with emotions I did not understand. Lashing out was easier than admitting I was overwhelmed.

The first key to emotional regulation is learning what to do with the emotions we actually have.

There are several steps in that process.
First, we must identify and understand the emotion.
Second, we must redirect its energy.
Third, we must decide how to act from it.

There is no fast forward button for emotional maturity. Time plays a role, but only if we allow time to do its work. Healing requires sitting with the discomfort. It requires silence. Reflection. Stillness.

Many people are unwilling to sit in that silence. We drown out the inner noise with constant distraction. Phones. Headphones. Endless talking. Endless scrolling. Anything to avoid facing what is surfacing inside us.

But wisdom does not come from noise.
Wisdom comes from steeping in thought.
From steeping in emotion.
From steeping in silence.

And silence often feels like isolation.

When you finally sit with yourself long enough, the emotions begin to reveal their root. You start to ask deeper questions. What is this really? Where did it begin? What is underneath it?

When I sat long enough with my anger, I realized something humbling. Much of it was not anger. It was fear. It was confusion. It was loneliness.

Anger had simply been the loudest expression.

Once I recognized that, everything shifted. I could not heal anger directly because anger was not the root. But I could address fear. I could comfort loneliness. I could bring clarity to confusion.

When I realized that younger version of me was simply scared and did not have the tools to regulate emotion, compassion began to replace criticism. I could forgive that younger version of myself for not knowing what I know now.

And forgiveness of self changes something profound inside you.

It may sound like semantics. It may not seem logical. But in matters of the spirit and the soul, logic does not always lead. The heart knows truths that the mind struggles to calculate.

When you forgive your past self, your present self softens.
When you have compassion for who you were, you become gentler with who you are becoming.

I often say that I get mad at getting mad. It sounds like an oxymoron, but it is the most honest way I can describe it. When I react in anger, I feel as though I have failed to handle a disagreement with maturity. I ask myself, if I have not learned emotional regulation by now, what have I been doing?

So I catch myself. Sometimes quickly. Sometimes not as quickly as I would like.

The default setting is still reaction at times. The goal is intention.

Progress is not perfection. It is awareness followed by adjustment.

What puzzles me is why emotional regulation is so slow to develop. We learn to crawl and walk almost automatically. Yet many people reach old age without mastering their emotions.

Perhaps it is because society does not teach it well. Many of our teachers never learned it. Many of our leaders never modeled it. And we often mirror what is modeled before us.

Emotional maturity is not inherited. It is cultivated.

And cultivating it requires courage. The courage to sit in silence. The courage to examine the root. The courage to forgive yourself.

Only then can anger become information instead of destruction.
Only then can love become stronger than reaction.
Only then can we truly love our neighbor, because we are no longer at war within ourselves.

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