CHRIST
IN WINTER: The Irrelevant Musings of An Angry Old Man—ANGER-PART I [M, 3-16-26]
Old
friend and colleague, Bob Parsons, became a school bus driver when he retired
from being a preacher. He tells of another driver who lost his cool because of
unruly students and slammed on his brakes. They had to call EMTs to attend to
the injuries of some of the kids.
This
brings up two issues: 1] Why don’t school buses have seat belts? 2] How should
we deal with anger?
I
have no answers for the first, and probably none for the second, but I’m going
to write about anger anyway. In fact, I’m going to write about it at such
length and in such a disorganized way that it’s going to take two columns. Reader
beware…
Besides,
this is Lent, a season that is dedicated to self-discipline and self-sacrifice,
to remind us of the sacrifice of Christ. So, a good time to talk about anger.
[An even better time would be when Jesus turned over the tables of the money
changers in the temple, but I have other plans for that story…]
We
can understand that bus driver. We’re all going to get mad sometimes,
especially at children, who can be so uncooperative, because, after all, they
are kids, and that’s how they get some control. Anger is a way to get control,
for anyone. It sounds strange, but we get control by getting out of control.
Anger
is real. We usually blame someone else, or some event, for it. “She made me
mad.” Sometimes it just boils up. We don’t know where it comes from. We get mad
way out of proportion to some little slight. I’ve heard people say that they
had beaten someone else down into the ground “because he looked at me funny.”
I
suspect that anger, especially that kind of anger, is part of original sin. It’s
just there, anger about life. St. Augustine said that “the so-called innocence
of children is more a matter of weakness of limb than purity of heart.” Anyone
who has ever cared for a child understands what he was saying. Kids get mad
just because they get frustrated.
Herman
Melville has Ishmael speak of this original sin/non-rational root of anger in Moby
Dick when he says “…especially when my hypos get such an upper hand on me,
that it requires a strong moral principle to prevent me from deliberately
stepping into the street, and methodically knocking people’s hats off—then, I
account it high time to get to sea as soon as I can.”
Anger
means we have reached the limits of our ability to cope.
Ishmael,
of course, is a “root” name. The original Ishmael was Abraham’s eldest son,
though born of Hagar, the maid of Abraham’s wife, Sarah. Isaac, though, the
biological son of Sarah, is claimed to be the true heir of Abraham, and thus of
Jews and Christians, with his first-born half-brother left out. That’s enough
to make anyone angry, so Melville’s Ishmael in some ways represents the
non-rational side of human nature, the half-breed side, the angry side that
just wants to knock people’s hats off for no reason. He is the original
sin/anger part of Jung’s “collective unconscious.”
Also
anger is probably a derivative of the biological imperative to stay alive, a
way of getting up enough energy to fight for existence.
Bernie
Siegel says that those who have the best chance to survive cancer are the
automatic fighters, those whose first thought at any challenge is to fight
back.
Anger
at the cancer is part of the fight. It’s certainly understandable if someone
gets angry with the insurance company that denies them treatment for the
cancer, too.
Anger,
though, at the doctors, at your spouse, at your children, at the neighbors, at
your pastor, because you have cancer, is misplaced. It happens, though, because
they are there and available, like the four-year-old tantrum is at the parents
or the dog because there’s nobody else in the house.
But
anger is also a choice, sometimes a largely unconscious choice, but it’s not
the only possible reaction to any person or occasion.
My
sister-in-law Millie was a great junior high special needs teacher. When she
had to discipline a student, she would say, “Your punishment will be this
because you decided to do that.” The kid would always protest. “I didn’t decide
to do it.” “Yes,” Millie would say, “you did.”
Probably
the best thing any of us can learn about anger: Regardless of how emotional we
are, anger is always a decision. We have a choice. That is freedom.
John
Robert McFarland
More
next column.
Please pray for Judith Unger, who is having surgery today.