Tara Brach - Anger: Responding, Not Reacting (2017-10-25)
Episode Date: October 27, 2017Anger: Responding, Not Reacting (2017-10-25) - Anger is natural, intelligent and necessary for surviving and flourishing. Yet when we are hooked by anger, it causes great personal and collective suffe...ring. This talk explores how to transform patterns of reactivity by bringing a mindful and compassionate attention to the unmet needs that underlie angry reactivity. When we learn how to pause and connect honestly with our inner experience, we are then able to respond to others from our full intelligence and heart. "Getting angry with another person is like throwing hot coals with bare hands: both people get burned." Buddha Your support enables us to continue to offer these talks freely. If you value them, I hope you will consider offering a donation at this time at www.tarabrach.com/donation/. With gratitude and love, Tara
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Greetings. We offer these podcasts freely and your support really makes a difference. To make a
donation, please visit tarabrock.com.
Namaste and welcome.
Tonight's class is on mindfulness of anger and working with anger. And I don't know if anyone
here, if you want to leave now, if it's not relevant, then go ahead.
I saw a cartoon of a bunch of monks on the D.C. mall and some of them had their hands and fists
and the leaders with a megaphone saying, what do we want? Mindfulness. When do we want it?
Now! Universal. So we look at anger with the understanding of it's part of all of our wiring,
that it's absolutely essential for our survival and our flourishing.
It's an intelligent emotion and it can be incredibly destructive when we get hijacked,
when it takes over.
And so the critical inquiry that we'll explore together really is how do we shift from reacting
out of anger to responding wisely to whatever the message is.
Because this is the trajectory of evolving consciousness that we make that shift
shift from reactivity when only part of our brains in control, the limbic system, to a response
that includes all of our brain and wisdom and heart. And we start with a parable that I shared
a year or two ago that I love. It's the parable of the prickly porcupine. And as it begins,
it was the coldest winter ever. Many animals died because of the cold.
the porcupines realizing the situation decided to group together.
This way they covered and protected themselves,
but the quills of each one wounded their closest companions
even though they shared their heat with each other.
After a while, they decided to distance themselves one from the other
to stop being wounded.
As they did this, they began to die, alone and frozen.
So they had to make a choice,
either accept the quills of their companions,
or disappear from the earth.
Wisely, they decide to go back to being together.
This way they learned to live with the little wounds
that were caused by the close relationship with their companion,
but the most important part of it
was the heat that came from the others
that enabled them to survive the coldest winter yet.
So the understanding we get from this
is that it's inevitable,
that we have clashes and needs,
and that we prick each other and it's universal and that even the best closest relationships anger gets evoked.
There's just these misunderstandings. We have these histories that play out with each other.
And of course the more raw or wounding, the more sensitive we are to getting pricked.
That's the given. And as humans we've had our great success as a species and I say success with quotes around it of course.
is that we do have this capacity to collaborate, to cooperate with each other, to make it
work out with each other and sustain connection.
And again, it's due to this recently evolved frontal cortex that does have this capacity
for empathy, really sensing what it's like for others and for mindfulness, for noticing
when we're getting really reactive and the suffering it causes.
and a quality of compassion that wants to act on that suffering.
So we have that and yet it's completely not easy.
I mean, we're still taken over all the time, possessed all the time.
And certainly on a societal level,
there's a sense that there's some covering that's been stripped away
and we're really sensing the rawness right now
that's always been there but it's more evident
and it's taking the form of outright anger
and a lot of fear and rawness.
So there's a kind of limbic spiraling right now of anger and reactivity.
And on a personal level, I don't know anyone that hasn't struggled with anger.
I can say that just period.
I just don't know anyone that hasn't certainly angry about what goes on in our society
and anger on a personal level.
So the inquiry here for us is when you get poked or stabbed, either in a personal relationship
or by reading the newspaper, which is a really hard thing to do and not feel the pricks,
you know, what happens inside you and how do you work with that?
I mean, if somebody criticizes you or breaks a promise in some way or talks about you behind your back
in a disparaging way or insults you or maybe hurts a loved one, what happens? Do we instantly
lock into blame and defensiveness and aggression? There's a cartoon with a dog and a psychiatrist
couch who says, I bark at everything. You can't go wrong that way. So, I mean, some of us are
primed like whatever comes up. We just, you know, just lash into whatever.
and if not outwardly mentally we go into this looping of resentment.
It's just hard to get it out of our system when something goes off, especially criticism.
And some of us act out and then regret it, some of us apologize.
One writer says, this is Rita Rudner, says, my grandmother's a very tough woman,
she buried three husbands, two of them.
them were just napping. So she didn't have regrets and apologize. As we begin to practice
mindfulness, we start noticing our patterns and being able to pause and have some more choices.
And that's really what we're going to dive into now. And there are really three principles in
investigating anger. And one I've mentioned it. It's absolutely a necessary, natural, intelligent
emotion that lets us know when we have a need where we've hit an obstacle that we need to act.
The second basic teaching or principle is, again I've mentioned when we get hijacked.
By hijacked means when our whole identity starts getting organized around anger,
when it becomes not just a state of mind but more of a trait, more ongoing, that sense
of blame and resentment, then they're suffering.
They're suffering because we cut off from the wholeness of our being, from our wisdom, from
our heart, and we cut off from others.
So they're suffering.
And then the third is that if we can learn to pause and deepen presence, we can transform
our life in a way that gives profound freedom.
It's possible then if we can pause and go inside, and I call this the U-turn, instead of
blaming and being angry, if we can pause and bring our attention within ourselves, then we're
able to respond in a powerful way, an intelligent way, a compassionate way.
So I want to look at those three, but I'm going to say the underlying attitude that really
can free you from the habit of kind of this twitch of getting angry.
and fixating outward is what sometimes described as taking 100% responsibility for your experience.
And this isn't new news to probably anyone, but it's a powerful context to hold for things
or a filter for everything.
On some level to know that you're not responsible for how others behave.
You're not responsible for the outcome of a relationship, but you can be 100% responsible
for what experience you have.
So we're going to get into that some more.
So just to say that for many people, because of our culture and having a taboo on anger looks bad
or whatever, although that's shifting now it's beginning to look good to some people,
but it's not always that way.
A lot of us have a sensor that goes on around it.
It's really important to be able to see that
because to not be able to access that energy
can be really, can cause a tremendous amount of suffering.
I worked with one young woman, young meaning now anybody that's younger than 64 is young to me.
But I worked with one woman in her early 20s,
and she was continuously being re-traumatized by her father's anger.
And so she didn't know how to really create a distance or create boundaries.
So we began to explore it and as she began to acknowledge, yes, I'm being harmed.
This is abuse.
When she could actually accept, this is abusive, this is hurting,
this is making me feel very, very terrified and very small and very small and very
ashamed when she began to get that this was abuse, in order to open to her rage, she had
to forgive that it was there.
And I do this.
I've actually taken this on as a practice that I'll get a surge of anger and often I'll
have to say, forgiven, forgiven, it's okay.
Not like this is bad but I forgive it but this is like the weather, the inner weather
system that's here, it's okay.
really okay. And that's what she had to do. She had to say, forgiven, it's really okay,
this rage is here. And once she started doing that, we started working with that energy
and it was incredibly intelligent and empowering for her, guided her to be able to sense
what boundaries did she need? When we're angry, there's an unmet need. We miss the unmet need. We
can't even figure it out or tune into it if we just stay in the outward directed anger.
But once we start investigating we'll find, oh, I have a need to feel safe.
I have a need to feel cared about or respected or whatever it is and for her safety and respect
was a real big one.
So she began to create the boundaries.
I won't be with you if you're drinking.
I won't spend time with you if you become demeaning.
If you raise your voice, I'm not going to be around.
So, anger's intelligent.
We need to acknowledge that.
And for her, it turned into suffering and I'll tell you how.
She got into a relationship and that rage she had towards her father kind of hardened into
the story of blame and being a victim and projecting others being like her father and so
it carried over in a big way into her current relationship and it wasn't.
It wasn't until she really did that U-turn and sensed the depth of the wound from her father
and the grief about it that she could begin to use anger again as an intelligent messenger
but not have it take over.
So anger is intelligent, it has a function.
The Tibetans describe the essence of anger as wise discrimination.
That there's some clarity in there that detects, okay, something needs attention.
And if we don't pay attention and we're not alert, it can take over.
So part three, the rest of our time, how do we work with it?
How do we pause and deepen our attention?
In the beginning, and as you know when we do these classes I invite you to pick areas
where you feel like you've gotten stuck, is that we start identifying, okay, so what's my primary
pattern in terms of getting angry?
Unless you're familiar with your patterning, you won't be able to catch it in pause, right?
So we bring it into awareness and I'll just name four primary.
ways that we end up expressing our aggression. And one of them is, of course, a direct lashing
out in anger. One writer, Lawrence Peter, says, speak when you're angry and you'll make the best
speech you'll ever regret. So, it's that direct lashing out. It's like out there. Then there's the
more passive-aggressive approaches where we control by withholding our affections or indirect
put downs or judgments or some manipulation where we're trying to control the other guilt,
whatever, but not being direct. It's like the woman who took out a personal's ad after a fight
that she got into in her marriage and it says free to a good home. And on one side of the ad,
you see a picture of a little kitten. Beautiful six-month-old male kitten,
orange and Carmel Tabby, playful, friendly, very affectionate, ideal for family with kids.
Or, the other side has a young man in it.
Handsome, 32-year-old husband, personable, funny, good job, but doesn't like cats, says either he goes or the cat goes.
Call Jennifer, come see both and decide which you'd like.
So there's direct lashing out, there's passive, aggressive, and then one that I really feel is important to mention is the, is punitive,
Like in some way threatening and punishing, it can happen intimidating people, but you
know, you behave or else and that's a big one.
And then of course there's gossip ways that we put others down, slandering them.
The challenge is that in any of these, whether it's the internal anger,
played that is punitive or judgmental or the external acting out or the passive-aggressive.
With any of them, they're fixated outward and so we're not going to be able to meet
the needs that are actually underneath the anger.
That's the idea here.
I mean think about it.
I mean if you think for yourself the last time you lashed out angrily, you're going to be
Did that help the other person to become more cooperative?
Did you get your needs met?
I mean most of us find that people get very defensive and we actually don't go at all towards
meeting our needs.
The Buddha put it this way, it says, getting angry with another person is like throwing
cut coals with bare hands, both people get burned.
And then Gandhi put it well, he said, an eye for an eye, makes the whole world blind.
I heard an interesting piece where one master said to have asked his disciples, why do we shout
when we're angry?
Why do people shout when they're upset?
Do you have a sense of why?
And people tried answering him, one said, well, you know, we lose our calm, we shout for
that, people couldn't really answer them. Why do you shout at a person when you're angry?
And finally he explained, when two people are angry at each other, their hearts distanced
a lot. And so to cover that distance, they must shout to be able to be heard by each other.
And the angrier they are, the stronger they have to shout trying to get through to the
other over that distance. He also said, what happens when two people are?
People fall in love. They don't shout at each other but talk very softly. Why? Because
their hearts are very close. The distance between them is very small. So we get familiar
with our own patterning, whatever it happens to be, and start noticing the suffering that
comes with it. The big question is, what's it like when we act out? And you might just close
your eyes for a moment. We'll just check this out for a second. We'd like to...
invite you in this pause to bring to mind a recent situation where you got activated, where
you reacted and got angry and that you regretted it.
And again, you might sense what style of aggression it was, whether you were angry and
you spoke behind somebody's back or you raised your voice or you just got caught in a long
spin of resentment.
Take some moments to investigate.
the situation and just notice for yourself what was the outcome of getting angry?
What was the effect on the other person?
Did you get your needs met?
Just to deepen it a little, when you were caught in it in that reactivity, what's your
sense of yourself?
What's the sense of the kind of person you are?
Do you like yourself?
and the investigation is not to add judgment but just to sense really with an awake awareness
the suffering, the squeeze of being inside that cocoon of anger, how it makes us small when it takes over.
So the steps to begin to alter the patterning begin with this liberating attitude which really undoes the
victimhood, which is that we're 100% responsible for our experience.
And you can open your eyes right now, but again, it's not for how, let's see, if you're
looking over that last one, it's not for how others behaved, obviously, but when you're
pricked, when you're hurt, responsible means you're 100% able to respond to yourself and the other
and the other and the situation in a way that at least you can take care of your own experience
with understanding and with empathy.
There's a way you can frame this as an intention that when as soon as you get angry,
if some part of you says, please may this serve deepening connection and understanding,
please may I wake up through this.
As soon as you do that, you're taking 100% percent.
responsibility. That's another angle for the same thing.
So here you are and you're getting activated. First step is to pause. No matter what, pause.
If you're activated there's no way you can create a new neuro pathway, a new pattern
of response unless you pause. Does that make sense? And what that means is that sometimes
you won't be able to because you'll be caught in a back-forth and you'll just lose it.
it and then you just forgive yourself and it's okay.
I mean you can't always pause.
We just don't have that control.
But sometimes we do.
I'm going to tell you a few stories to kind of give you examples.
But the first step is that you pause and you make that U-turn
knowing that no matter how much the other person seems like the trigger,
the place to attend is what's going on inside us.
So the U-turn is the beginning,
the beginning of being able to respond with more intelligence.
Now my first example, it's hard to talk about anger and so I'm going to tell you one of the
times I was most angry in my whole life which was at my son and this was a long time ago
but it was it really you know it's still, in fact he and I talked about it just recently
because I wanted to see if his memory matched mine so I'll share that. Anyway, he
In bringing up Narayan, one of my biggest values was truth-telling.
And I wasn't a super punishing mom, like barely at all.
So it wasn't really hard for him.
You know, he was actually quite honest except once.
And he was nine or ten, I don't remember.
But he and a friend stole some snacks from a snack bar at a swim club.
And I heard about it through some other parents that had found out.
I don't quite remember that pathway.
But when I confronted him, he said,
oh, somebody's lying, it was just to make him look bad.
In other words, he denied it.
And I was filled with a rage, like I was very unfamiliar with that level of rage.
So we both took a timeout.
And I told him right then that I needed a time out and he needed a time out.
So we both took a time out.
And during mine, I have no idea what he did during his,
but during mine I brought a lot of, did the U-turn, in other words, and again the U-turn
means bringing a mindful attention and a kind attention to what's going on inside us.
And I let the rage be there, like rain, you recognize and allow, okay, it's rage, let it be there.
And then I was investigated, I found underneath the rage was a really deep,
sense of hurt. Like, it hurt my feelings that he had broken the rules and lied to me. And underneath
even the hurt was grief because it just felt like such a severing. And to this day, there's nothing
that can activate me more, I think, than a sense of being somebody lying to me because in some
way that's the ultimate severing of our consensual togetherness. So that's what had happened. So I got in
touch with that sense of severed belonging, of the grief of being distanced from this person
that I adored and just brought a tremendous amount of compassion to it. I just sat with it and
held a lot of compassion. And that gave me more space and then I could imagine, well, what would
he be going through? Because my unmet need was the need for feeling connected, feeling integrity,
feeling, you know, belonging with him. So I imagine his unmeted need.
met need when, you know, in this process would of course be that he was afraid.
He was afraid of being punished.
So we talked and when we talked I named very, I named exactly what I just named to you
that I was, I felt a lot of rage when this happened and when I got under the rage I was feeling
a lot of grief and hurt.
And I cried.
And as soon as he got it, the realness, all his defenses, his defenses couldn't hold up.
And then of course he was very upset because he had made me upset and, you know, and we
were able to talk so he could see the impact of his lie.
And I learned a lot because I realized that there was nothing that could have been more impactful
to him than me being real.
Any sort of punishing, any act out of anger would not have brought us to that place.
And I can say that he's been amazingly honest, even things that are very hard for both of us to
hold, but basically it's never out of bounds, he's a great kid, or grown-up man now,
but that was a pivotal thing.
So I'm naming that because when we pause and come back to our own experience,
we can get to the vulnerability that actually can begin to defuse the situation.
We become more of an integrated whole being when we re-enter.
A woman sent me this poem she calls anger.
my grandkids were relieved to hear
that I was on my way today
to a temper modification program called meditation
or at least that's how they see it.
I see things differently.
Sitting in silence,
I reconnect life-scattered pieces.
Sitting in silence,
I reconnect life-scattered pieces.
So 100% responsible
means that we can respond.
We have that power.
It's incredibly empowering.
So the key principles,
when there's anger,
both people, there's an unmet need.
When there's unmet needs,
if we focus on the other,
what's wrong with that person?
We will never get our needs met.
If we make the U-turn,
we can get in touch with the vulnerability
and the needs within us.
and then respond in a way that takes care of ourselves and others.
The idea is not to suppress anger or act out of it, but to let its energy guide us in discovering
how to take care of needs.
Now the question often comes, well, when do I speak out?
And for me, the response is whenever it has a chance of increasing understanding and
connection, speak out. Whenever speaking out will help you to take care of unmet needs, speak
out if it's possible. Story I heard a while back, a couple have been married for 60 years and to
stay together for that long, you have to be completely honest with your partner. So the husband and
wife were very open and shared everything and didn't have any secrets from each other. Well,
almost. The wife kept a shoebox in the closet which she had asked her husband not to open
or even ask about. And the man never thought about the box in 60 years until the day his wife
got very sick. The doctor said she wouldn't make it. While trying to sort out their affairs,
the husband took the shoebox to his wife's bedside and she agreed it was time for him to see
what was inside. The man's eyes widened as he discovered 95,000
dollars and two crocheted dolls in the box.
She said, when we were to be married, my grandmother told me the secret of a happy marriage
was to never argue.
She told me that if I ever got angry with you, I should just keep quiet and crochet a doll.
Hussein was deeply touched.
Two dolls meant she was angry with him only twice in 60 years.
Honey, he said after overcoming the emotions that...
He said, that explains the doll, but what about all this money?
Where did it all come from?
Oh, that, the wife said.
That's the money I made from selling the dolls.
So it's a fun one, but I want to remind you again that anger's not bad.
It's an alert asking for attention, and we can be 100% responsible.
Another is able to respond and talk and communicate in a way that doesn't blame
that actually brings more intimacy.
And to have real intimacy, we have to be able to speak truths.
Some of you remember Adrian Rich, who says,
an honorable human relationship that is one in which
two people have the right to use the word love
is a process of deepening the truths they can tell each other.
It's a process of deepening the truths they can tell each other.
other. She says it's important to do this because it breaks down human self-delusion and isolation.
So as we explore again how we work with anger in our own lives, it's not about stuffing it.
It's about making the you turn and then being able to communicate from a much wiser place.
So the last piece we'll explore really is how do we do that communicating.
Once there's anger going on, how do we communicate to each other?
And I recommend Marshall Rosenberg's work on nonviolent communication as one example of a very
simple formula that is very synergistic to what we're talking about with the U-turn,
with mindfulness inside.
And what he basically teaches,
and this is so you can sense the intuitively,
is that when there's conflict
and when both people are angry,
to begin by naming the what happened objectively,
you know, when such and such happened,
not adding a blame kind of thing.
Like when you told me
that you weren't going to be able to do the vacation,
we planned. Then you just name that, not when you, after all that time, broke your promise
and did that, you know, in other words, just real simple, objectively what happened. And then here's the key.
You just name, I felt such and such because I needed. You name you need. Naming the feeling
and naming the need. And I'll give you an example of some of the descriptions of situations. When we're in a
and you say the car ahead is slowing, there's a stop sign, don't pass now, that makes
me feel.
Then I go into feeling mistrusted and put down because I need to feel respected for my driving.
So that would be an example of just saying it clearly.
Another example, when we agree on leaving at 7 p.m. and at 7.15 and you aren't home yet, again,
that's saying it clearly.
versus adding other layers.
So an example of anger, being in an angry clash and talking,
I want to give you that example.
And then I'm going to do a meditation where you get to try it out.
So this is a story of my husband and I,
from way back in the days when we were young and confused,
a long, long time ago.
This actually was our first years together.
we had very early on agreed to have a couple of times a week a morning check-in where we'd meditate
together and see how things were going and it mattered to me more than it mattered to him
in terms of keeping our timing and so on and one morning I was the night before he told me
he had something scheduled so we'd have to shorten our check-in and that triggered me
And so that morning, right at the beginning of the check-in, I told them that I said it just right,
I said, when you told me that we were going to have to reduce the time of our check-in,
I felt really angry.
And then he judged me for judging him aggressively.
So he got very angry at me for being angry at him for something he didn't think,
he warranted angry.
So that's the background.
You don't need any more than that.
So we did it just right. We did this nonviolent communicating just right. You know, when you said
I'm upset, I felt angry and fear. This is what he said to me. When you said I'm upset with
you, I felt angry and fearful because I need to feel understanding and acceptance and safety.
You know, I need, you know, that kind of thing. And I mirrored him and set, you know, set it back.
And so we did it completely according to the protocol.
except we both felt completely crummy and there was zero empathy.
Okay?
We were still running our judgments.
The other person was still wrong and we felt disconnected and angry.
So basically we were not really in touch with ourselves.
We hadn't really done the full connecting inwardly.
24 hours later, we both had chance to do it,
to really do the U-turn so we could truly be responsible.
be responsible and get in touch with our deeper intention.
And for me what happened in that 24 hours, and you'll sense the parallels to with my son,
is that underneath the circling blame, underneath the anger was a hurt feeling.
It was a sense of, it was kind of a young place that, you know, I'm not lovable, the feeling
that if you really love me, he would cherish this time and want to spend time being close.
and so the need, the deep need, remember there's always an unmet need, was to feel lovable,
was to feel like I matter, to feel special.
And for him, during that time, he really got in touch with how, when he felt anger coming at
him, how much mistrust it brought up, like, oh, I'm really not safe.
I can't be who I am.
Something really bad could happen.
his need for safety. So when we spoke and I was able to let him know that I went right into
that very young, unlovable, I need love place, and when he was able to let me know how he
really got scared, he went to a young place that felt scared when he felt my anger, the empathy
was there. We both softened. So it was then that we were able to
start expressing what we needed from each other in order to work with this kind of
a situation.
As long as there was a sense of blame, we were defended.
So the key again is you have to pause and sometimes the pause can take 24 hours.
You have to pause long enough to get in touch with vulnerability.
Does that make sense?
if you want to be able to communicate with another person and not make them defensive.
Now I'm going to name some of the challenges to this.
And one challenge is that people say to me, well, what happens if it really seems like the
other person, our myself is really wrong?
Okay?
Some of you might be wondering that.
Like, what if somebody's really wrong, you know?
And this is the most critical discipline in the whole game.
which is no matter how wrong somebody seems according to you, it still doesn't matter.
Because being into that wrong, you're wrong, is that those moments we're not connecting
with what our real needs are and finding an integrated place within us so that we can actually
communicate.
It doesn't matter whether they're right or wrong.
What matters is that we are 100% responsible, which means you've got to get back in touch
with your own integrated heart mind to be able to respond well.
Some of you might remember that, quote, vengeance is a lazy form of grief.
That if we act out and we haven't gotten in touch with what's there, we can't really take
care of ourselves or another.
So here's another question.
Okay, I get it, they're not intrinsically bad or wrong, but they're harmful.
How do I keep my heart open if they keep wounding me?
Right?
That's an important question, right?
And so just to say that there's not a particular, it's case by case, how do you take care
of yourself?
But the more you've connected with your inner life and touched into your needs,
the more you'll know what you need to do to create the proper boundaries.
You can leave a relationship.
You can decide not to spend time with someone.
But if you create your boundaries from anger and hatred,
you will never be taking the time you need to do the healing.
So it's to go inward.
Just to say that there's something called idiot compassion,
which is when you don't do that.
Idiot compassion is when they're trying so hard to be open-hearted and, you know, okay, nobody's
wrong, nobody's wrong, that you don't know when to say no.
And this is from Pema Children.
She says, compassion doesn't only imply trying to be good.
When we find ourselves in an aggressive relationship, we need to set clear boundaries.
The kindest thing we can do for everyone concerned is to know when to say enough.
Many people use Buddhist ideals to justify self-debasement.
In the name of not shutting our heart, we let people walk all over us.
It has said that in order to not break our vow of compassion, we have to learn when to stop
aggression and draw the line.
There are times when the only way to bring down barriers is to set boundaries.
So really, we'll try to post this quote because it feels that important.
When we talk about anger, we're not talking and not acting out of our limbic, you know, not
letting that hijack happen, we're not talking about letting people walk all over us.
We're just talking about having the wisdom to first make the U-turn so we're in touch with ourselves.
Some people ask, well, does that mean I can never express anger that I always have to pause
and make the U-turn?
You might be wondering that also.
And first of all, no, because you will express anger and you won't pause and that'll happen.
So the deal is just to forgive it and understand.
And sometimes the container, you and another person can hold the anger and it needs to be felt.
But generally, in order to heal, we have to get in touch with what's there.
I'm going to give you one last question that comes up because we could be spending many,
many weeks on this. And that is, well, I can process anger and emotions and communicate and so on,
but my partner can't. What do I do then? Or my friend can't. And just to say, it's often uneven.
That's part of how it is. When it's uneven, first of all, the more you are 100% responsible
and therefore not blaming, the more you'll create a safe container for the other person to learn
how to be able to check in and communicate in that way.
And even if it seems not fair, like, oh, I have to do all the work,
it's actually a blessing.
Because if you have the capacity to be the one to know how to pause and reconnect with yourself,
you're going to be operating from a much more resourced place
and it will ripple out.
It does have an effect on others.
So I'd like to have us do a reflection together and explore this a little bit in our own
experience.
So take a moment, if you will, when you come sitting still, because it's so powerful
to begin to explore situations where we've been playing out the same old behavior for decades
and sense the possibility of creative new options.
In these moments, sense yourself pausing right now.
And take some time to feel yourself in your body, feel your breath.
I'd like to invite you to bring up some sort of a conflict
where you felt distance and some resentment or blame
with somebody, ideally somebody that you care about,
somebody that you want to have a good connection with.
It could be a recent conflict or some ongoing way that you feel you get caught in judgment
and blame, the other person's reacting to.
And if you can't find someone you care about it, you're close to,
just somewhere that you feel you get caught in anger.
And for starters, let yourself feel an openness about this.
what's possible if I'm 100% responsible for my experience?
Just to let this openness to, it's so empowering.
And let yourself review what happened.
It's as if you're watching the movie of what happened in the conflict.
You can remember the words or see the expressions in the other's face
and let yourself run it and then freeze the frame where the reactivity is really strong.
When you freeze the frame, just sense this possibility that this is a pause time and making
that you turn and just checking inside yourself.
Okay, so when I'm the thick of this, what am I feeling?
Are you feeling scared, threatened, put down, disregarded, somebody's interfering with something
that really matters to you, disrespected, not that.
cared about? What are you really needing? If you're feeling not cared about, the need would
be to feel cared about. What's the need? Are the needs? To bring a very gentle attention
to whatever you're noticing. And if you feel blocked, just know that it's time, that
you just need some time and you can continue this on your own pace. Just a sense of what is
that vulnerable part of me really needing? Is it to feel respected or seen? It's to feel
love, just to feel understood, see if you can offer some kindness to the place that has
an unmet need, just some care, right, this moment, if it helps to put your hand on your
heart and just really be in relationship with that place, try that out.
And notice what happens when you offer kindness inward, just in this moment, you become just
a real caring witness and presence to your own unmet need, to sense that kind of coming home
to yourself in a very kind way, presencing for yourself.
And it might be from this place you can think of the other person and even get a sense
of maybe what that person was feeling or needing where their anger was coming from.
from this perspective you might sense what other options or choices would be possible in
how you might respond to the person and the situation.
In a deep way sense really who you are when you've made that you turn and reconnected with
yourself just to sense more of that that wholeness of being that you're really sitting
in and occupying.
the truth, the awake heart.
I'd like to close with a brief verse from John O'Donohue.
He wrote this, he's called for love in a time of conflict.
He says, when the gentleness between you hardens and you fall out of your belonging
with each other, may the depths you have reached hold you still.
When no true word can be said or heard,
when you mirror each other in the script of hurt,
when even the silence has become raw and torn,
may you hear again an echo of your first music.
When the weave of affection starts to unravel
and anger begins to sear the ground between you,
before this weather of grief invites a black seed of bitterness
to find root, may your souls come to kiss.
Now is the time for one of you to be gracious.
Now is the time for one of you to be gracious
to allow a kindness beyond thought and hurt.
Reach out with sure hands to take the chalice of your love
and carry it carefully through this echoless waste
until this winter pilgrimage leads you
towards the gateway to spring.
Thank you for your attention. Namaste.
For more talks and meditations, and to learn about my schedule or join my email list,
please visit tarabrock.com.
