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The Trail to Tranquilty

By Rabbi Lazer Brody
Thesis:  Anger is a bummer. It does nobody any good; get rid of it and find peace.
Stuff to remember:

  • Different levels of anger
    • 1 – Overt anger and violent revenge
    • 2 – Silent anger and emotional revenge
    • 3 – Incessant overt anger, but no revenge.
    • 4 – Conventionally polite – calm in public, angry at home
    • 5 – Periodically explosive, but trying to do better.
    • 6 – Advanced spiritual trainee – no more outward anger
    • 7 – Forgives and forgets, no more anger in thought, but hurt when reminded of painful experiences
    • 8 – The peacemaker
    • 9 – Repays cruelty with kindness
    • 10 – Loves God and his fellow human no matter what, and is equally happy at bad times as at good times.
  • How can you be happy with the bad as well as the good?
    • Remember that the Almighty runs the world.
    • Remember that the Almighty has infinite love for all his creatures.
    • Remember that the almighty knows what’s best for each.
  • If you have higher expectations than realizations, you’ll be angry.
  • 12 Self-destructive Damagers of Anger
    • Damage to the soul
    • Damage to one’s appearance
    • Angry people invoke sever judgment against themselves
    • Anger shortens health and life span.
    • Anger damages your income
    • Anger causes sadness.
    • Anger causes fear.
    • Anger induces stupidity and bad judgment.
    • Society dislikes angry people.
    • Anger clouds truth.
    • Anger causes amnesia
    • Anger locks the door to spiritual gain.
  • Spiritual awareness
    • Understanding that the creation of the universe and all of its inhabitants, from the great galaxies to the one-celled ameba, wasn’t a random, inexplicable event. The Almighty  created the world for a purpose, and continues to sustain all that He created.
    • Understanding that each individual creation has a unique purpose.
    • Understanding that you have a soul within you, a divine spark of the Almighty, which elevates you above all the other creations.
    • Understanding that God controls the universe and all its inhabitants, but grants you the freedom to do good or evil.
    • Understanding that God talks to you personally by way of the stimuli in your environment and the events of your life.
    • Understand that you have a very special mission in this world.
  • One week plan
    • Sunday – Don’t act according to instinct. Stop, compose yourself, and think before you act or speak.
    • Monday – Use your mind in a active mode, not a passive mode.
    • Tuesday – Decide you’ll be happy today no matter what.
    • Wednesday – Observe the world around you, for each stimulus in our lives is a message from Heaven. Contemplate God to the best of your ability.
    • Thursday – Try to perform good deeds.
    • Friday – Abstain from mind-influencing substances.
    • Saturday – Talk to God.
  • You know you have improved your spiritual awareness if:
    • You are courageous, calm, and have inner security.
    • Happiness.
    • Improved physical and mental health.
    • Peace, both internal and external, the opposite of anger.
    • Soul over body priorities.
    • Giving over receiving priorities.
    • Efficiency
    • When I begin to realize I know nothing.
  • Avoid self induced suffering by:
    • Observation,
    • Self evaluation, and
    • Implementation
  • 12 Causes of Self-Induced Suffering
    • Hurting another’s feelings
    • Negligence in performing a good deed
    • Negligence in developing one’s spiritual self
    • Wrongdoing
    • Sadness and ingratitude
    • Lack of trust in God
    • Flattery
    • Arrogance
    • Verbally abusing one’s fellow man
    • Setting a trap for others
    • Buffoonery
    • Taking pleasure in another person’s sorrow
  • Anger makes you a tyrant
    • Anger based on superficial or circumstantial evidence
    • Denying a person the benefit of the doubt, and therefore considering him guilty before he has a chance to prove otherwise.
    • Failing to consider a fact that could overturn a verdict.
    • Judgments based on stereotypes or preconceptions.
    • Projecting our own weakness, insecurity, and character flaws on others, arriving at mistaken conclusions accordingly.
  • Be at peace with yourself
    • Look for your good points; try to find your particularly special attributes and cultivate them.
    • Divide your weaknesses into two categories: those you can control and those you can’t. Do what you can to improve those you can control.
    • The weaknesses out of your control are your blessings – they help you make spiritual growth and channel you to your purpose in life. Resenting those weaknesses destroys your inner peace and keeps you away from the truth.
    • Judge yourself fairly
      • Never look back
      • Stop torturing yourself
      • Be constructive
      • No guilt!
    • Utilize your talents for the benefit of society
    • Don’t e angry or disappointed when you fail. Never despair. Make a new start.
      • Only doers fail
      • Failure teaches, and usually triggers a stronger effort
      • Failure brings us closer to God
      • Experience is life’s best teacher
      • Small-scale failure assures large-scale success
    • Live your own life! Don’t live according to society’s expectations of you; in other words, don’t play the world’s game. Play your own game. Avoid competing with others and concentrate on competing with yourself.
    • Don’t blame yourself for your setbacks. Conversely, don’t take credit for your successes. Just do the best you can with the tools you have.
    • Understand your very special mission on earth. Try your best to understand why God created you the way He did.
    • Understand that your soul is timeless. You will affect the world long after you’re gone.

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