266. Anger

It’s certainly no coincidence that I’m writing about anger right after I wrote about violence. Violence is a very common and unfortunate companion to anger, and I think it’s a major reason anger has such a bad name. Like sadness, it’s too often seen as something to get rid of quickly, or hide, rather than as a legitimate emotion from which to learn.
But anger has motivated many people to do many great things. When people are angry about something, and think clearly about their anger, they find ways
to express their anger, and when appropriate, act on it. Often, they get good things to happen, and their lives and others’ lives are better off.
As I tried to think of examples from history, of course violent examples came to mind first. Colonists got angry about taxation without representation, and dumped some tea into Boston Harbor – a relatively peaceful act – but their anger was more frequently expressed in acts of violence. Furthermore, as they dumped the tea, they were disguised as people who had other reasons for being angry. Not a very good example.
But as I taught children about Mohandas Gandhi or Rosa Parks, I stressed the fact that these two people were often angry. They were angry about injustice, hatred, and violence. While I didn’t know either one of them, and couldn’t tell children specifically how Gandhi and Parks had learned to express anger peacefully, I told them about the good effects of the words and actions that expressed the anger. India ceased to be an English colony, and buses in Montgomery were desegregated.
Anger really is okay. It took me years to learn that, and I almost wrote “Anger is good,” which isn’t quite what I mean. Emotions are morally neutral, but when they are handled well, they can inspire words and actions that have good effects. Most of us, I think, have experienced people’s anger in ways that make us want to stay away from it, and to make sure we don’t express anger.
For the most part, we’re still not doing a great job handling our own anger, and so, of course, we’re not teaching children effective ways to handle theirs. Children see how their models (both the real-life ones and the media models) get angry (“Don’t get mad; get even”). And that’s what they learn. They learn that “good” people don’t express anger, and they grow up with the same problems we grew up with.
This pattern makes me angry. What I do with that anger is write about it and teach. I hope that has the effect I want it to have. I’m sure violent acts wouldn’t.

Similar Posts

  • 186. Taking Risks

    I’ve often heard it said that we should be encouraging children to take risks. To me, there are three categories of risks – health risks, physical risks, and personal risks – and I’ve usually shied away from the first two and been fairly “brave” about the third. I would much rather have my foot in…

  • 220. Clubs

    I understand why children want to have clubs. Ricky Eugster and I formed the Texas Rangers when we were seven. I was Jase Pearson, and he was Clay Morgan. There were a few other members from time to time. And everybody else wasn’t in the club, so we got to be “us,” and everyone else…

  • 226. Celsius

    Teachers were told, quite a while ago, that we ought to teach children to use Celsius, because we’d be switching to it soon. I thought it would be a difficult transition, but I didn’t know how steadfastly our country would cling to our way of measuring temperature, even as the rest of the world left…

  • 118. Curiousity

    I don’t think curiosity killed the cat. I don’t know which particular cat the old adage refers to, but I am confident that it was not killed by curiosity. Perhaps it died because of its unintelligent approach to finding out what it wanted to know. Perhaps, in its attempt to learn, it was unlucky, and…

  • 45. Humor

    Humor can be serious business. True, it can be an irritating distraction at times, diverting attention from the issue at hand. It can be destructive, eating away at human dignity or conveying suppressed anger in a way that it can’t be answered (Can’t you take a joke?). I know funny people, people who receive humor…

  • 40. No

    When a child says no to a teacher, it raises an issue that we used to consider simple. In elementary school, I never said no to a teacher. I’m pretty sure I would have had trouble if I had. Occasionally, I witnessed what happened if a child said no to a teacher. It wasn’t a…