Anger: The pet needs to be leashed always.
I don't want to know what made someone angry or what makes someone enraged to the extent of harming others.
But even after all the time of this act, what does one get?
satisfaction? Serotonin? Calmness? or something we call justice?
I don't know what makes anger a good emotion or something that just develops someone at a personal level.
Watching someone being angry may create memories for someone, but mostly it creates trauma, I guess.
I know some people may think anger helps in making someone understand more about their duty or responsibility.
But how long can one do that?
over his/her lifetime?
I think this thing will create toxicity, nothing more than that.
You never know when words turn into heavy blows or violence.
Well, do you think you can control anger?
Now the main thing is what is counted to be anger for you?
There can be different criteria for every person, but let's take it in general.
I think anger is something in which one cannot digest something. It happens when the limit of acceptance starts getting surpassed by events happening around us. When we let the event control, even we know that anger would not do anything but just vent; we prefer to show anger.
One can understand anger; if one has put so much effort into something but still does not get output, this breaks the person. One who can even control himself in this situation is someone who knows nothing is going to work by doing this and starts doing it again. That's resilience.
The thing is that anger is nothing if we think logically. All anger comes from our emotional system in our body; that's all how we react emotionally to any situation.
I know anger is such a hard thing to control for someone but just try or think for once.
Do you think your anger will ever be beneficial for someone?
It may or may not, I think in most of the cases. Anger is just something that suppresses other people.
Now it all depends on the type of suppression.
Well, at last, I just want to say that anger is a pet; you need to train it in the right way, know when to take it for a walk, know when to hit it with a stick, and know when to let it bite.
At last, you are the only one responsible for your act or consequences.