Letters from the International School
Anger by Kim Nataraja
The Desert Fathers and Mothers and the Mystics of all ages point
out that the faithful committed practice of one-pointed attention
in meditation/prayer leads to a wider awareness. It starts, however,
with more awareness of our wounded ego and how its conditioning
blocks our spiritual awareness of the Presence of Christ. We note
how automatic our response to an emotional stimulus is. Moreover,
we so often forget the cause lies in us:
A brother was restless in the community and often moved to anger.
So he said:” I will go and live somewhere by myself. And since
I shall be able to talk or listen to no one, I shall be tranquil,
and my passionate anger will cease.” He went out and lived
alone in a cave. But one day he filled his jug with water and put
it on the ground. It happened suddenly to fall over. He filled it
again, and again it fell. And this happened a third time and in
a rage he snatched up the jug and broke it. Returning to his right
mind, he knew that the demon of anger had mocked him, and he said:
“I will return to the community. Where ever you live, you
need effort and patience and above all God’s help.”
This story teaches us that awareness will offer us the choice
not to react in a habitual way. When the silence of regular periods
of meditation allow us to hear the inner intuitive voice of the
‘self’ rather than the chattering surface one of the
‘ego’, insights are afforded in the conditioned roots
of our present conduct. We become aware of the fact that these blind
responses were determined in a particular time and place and are
often no longer relevant. An attitude of detachment from the behaviour
of the ‘ego’, a standing slightly apart, creates a gap
between stimulus and response, a gap in which choices can be made
as to how to react. This is real freedom. We can break through their
relentless inevitability; the fixed template can be loosened, habitual
defensive structures can be removed and a free creative response
is possible. Meditation
Like the monk in the story our strongest habitual responses is often
anger or depression - the result of repressing anger. This is reflected
in the detailed teaching from the Desert Tradition about the ‘Demon
of Anger’. The Desert hermits considered that one way of dealing
with the automatic angry response to the insults of others was the
virtue of humility that we have been talking about. It reminds me
of a Zen story: “A hermit, who lived in the forest close to
a village, was one day confronted by an angry crowd of villagers,
who accused him of having made a young girl pregnant. “Is
that so?” was all he said. He took the young girl in and looked
after her. After some time had passed the young girl went back to
the village and confessed to her parents that she had lied; the
son of their neighbour, whom she loved, was the father. The villagers
went back to the hermit, apologized profusely, telling him the story.
All he said was: “Is that so?”
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