On Anger

Anger as a gateway to noticing other emotions

I remember anger. By now we know that our brains are hardly reliable when it comes to memory. The brain reconstructs the past each time we recall it. Moreover, what we perceive in any given moment is shaped by the mental state we bring to it. What follows is a memory already tinted by perception.

So I remember (giggles) that some years ago, at a Delhaize in Belgium, I was walking around the aisles, near the pasta and pasta sauces when a man passed me by and pushed me quite harshly. He didn’t even stop to apologize.

I immediately felt a fire ignite in my belly, oh so powerful. I was indignant, I wanted acknowledgment, an apology, maybe even revenge. I remember observing how powerful I felt, how anger activated me, gave me energy, focus, a goal.

After noticing how I felt, my awareness turned towards the man, and I realized he probably had not, in fact, noticed that he had just pushed me. He was an older man. In my memory, the whole supermarket was vibrant and full of color. I was sharp and bright gliding along the aisles, and the man looked gray and unhappy, dragging his body like a snail towards the vegetable section*.

I remember thinking how seductive the state of anger is. There is no fear, which is nice. It feels activating, also nice. It feels righteous —amazing. A seductive, powerful force. I do not know if anger is as seductive to everyone as it seemed to me that day. But I was very intrigued by what I observed. Perhaps I like anger, perhaps I am even addicted to it, to feeling powerful, energized, righteous. It’s an observation I carried with me for a long time. 

Days later I remember thinking, in comparison, how uninteresting the alternative seemed. The alternative, no reaction or even compassion, was the less familiar path. Anger I knew well, while compassion, or even just understanding was simply less familiar, less rehearsed, not immediately available. They seemed less rich experientially, even boring.

Compassion’s subtlety together with my lack of familiarity made it less readily available. It has taken me much longer to begin appreciating its vastness, its grace, and the freedom it offers.

Anger, so generous in its obviousness, became a guide to other, more subtle and less familiar emotions.

I was very upset this morning. Someone did not show up for an appointment again, and when I texted to check in, my irritation made the response I received sound like an excuse. I noticed my anger rise, I tried to move on but my anger kept rising. Then narratives started to emerge each one making me angrier than the last. For me, narratives function as warning signs, once they start to emerge, it is better to take a step back. Breath. Movement. 

To rest on the rhythm of the breath helps. Stopping for a moment and looking at the other in a neutral way is also helpful. Asking what is this? is particularly insightful. I noticed the physical reactions to anger: slightly warm face, stomach fire slowly rising, growing muscular tension. Since moving on didn’t work, I decided to engage my body and move with purpose, arrange my son’s toys, plant some poppy seeds that just arrived in the mail.

Eventually, understanding arrived. Then the softening of compassion, by now much more familiar. And then the realization that when something is consistently not working, it may simply mean finding a different arrangement.

As for today, I’ll clean the house myself.

Son eating a boterham (sandwich), completely unbothered, in the Nationaal Park Zuid-Kennemerland, near Haarlem, The Netherlands.

*See more about perception in Buddhism here and mediation instructions related to perception here

The Householder

The past several years have been all sorts of intense.

I moved to the Netherlands ten years ago, and my partner (The Dutch) and I had a child five years ago. We live in Leiden and this place has now truly become our home. Since the birth of my son both of my parents have passed away, my dad two years ago and my mom last summer. I formed some precious friendships and others that exist more in the rhythm of my son’s playdates. I took a break from work, and now that our child goes to school, I am slowly finding my way back.

I was pregnant during the hardest coronavirus lockdowns yet I felt fine, safe, collected. My meditation practice had been flourishing before I became pregnant, and it continued to grow during the months preceding my son’s birth. I was leading a daily Social Meditation Zoom practice with local folks, it was beautiful.

After my son’s birth I felt so good, it was like a warm wind carried me everywhere.

With the help of Martine, a dharma friend and guide, I tried to bridge my formal meditation practice with everyday activity. Beyond the famous washing the dishes or doing the laundry mindfully image, I tried to chop wood and carry water with an infant. I had some previous experiences to guide me, or remind me what a state of just being, or just doing felt like.

For a while it was relatively easy to ignore narratives, at least the known ones, and to come back to the breath, or the tiny child, or the warm sun.

But, in my mind at least, the lack of formal practice together with the complexities of life, including those of a foreign mother navigating child-rearing in a different country, started to create a different set of conditions.

As I return to formal practice, I want to write about what being a householder practitioner was and is like for me. There are not many accounts in the Buddhist scriptures about what a householder path looks like. And for some reason, that path has always engaged my imagination.

I find this an important conversation, not only for Buddhist or practitioners within (or without) a tradition, but also for people engaged in other disciplines that require the right intention, gentle discipline and space-time. I think for example, of Ashtanga Yoga, which I practiced in Belgium before I moved to The Netherlands. Maybe, this is something we can figure out this century.

The last turning of the wheel is also driven by householders.

At our favorite place, Katwijk.