Anger: This is Why You Are Angry!

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Grab the Moment

If you want to enjoy it, you must be fully present in the moment.
You unintentionally take yourself out of the moment you record it on a camera or a phone, preventing you from fully experiencing it.

Therefore, before snapping a picture, take a moment to ask yourself: “Do I want to engage in and appreciate the moment, or do I want to capture and document it?”

True Power

We would feel happier and more pleased if our thoughts were more positive. The genuine test of moral strength is the ability to maintain our temper in the face of criticism and rejection. It is simple to feel satisfied when we are praised and valued. Understanding God’s method of love is the first step toward developing this. Only when we are in deep contemplation can we see God showing us the kind of love we need to express so that we ourselves never reject or criticize and always generate good wishes for others. Then, we will be content no matter what the future holds for us.

Anger: Understanding Anger

Why does rage occur? What is anger? It’s easy. Anger is a reaction to someone who disobeys your requests or who does an action you do not want them to. That someone might be a single person or a group of people. It could also be the case that something didn’t turn out the way you needed, wanted, or anticipated it would. We grow angry by the behavior of one country toward another, one group toward another, a few towards many, a few towards one, etc., as we see global events. Because we are:

a) tied to the way things are and

b) identified with the pain felt by one side and feel it ourselves (in fact, we generate it out of sympathy), we react by getting agitated.

Angry is the feeling. What we fail to see and understand is that when we respond with anger, we just damage ourselves and cannot assist those experiencing the effects of their own rage.


I’m thrilled to share with you all that today, on 22-Feb-2023, I received the Amazon best-selling tag by selling over 270 books on a single day!


Message for the day

A good character is formed by good deeds.

What it tells you: There is a great deal of guilt and regret once a wrong deed is committed. Such negative feelings persist, coloring all future actions negatively also. Therefore, regret does nothing to alter or improve the situation. Instead, it makes the issue even worse. On the other side, deliberate positive behavior develops a good character.

What you should experience: At a time when I do something wrong if I intentionally and consciously perform a good action, it becomes a base for the old feeling of guilt and remorse to be gone. Similar to an audiocassette, The old unpleasant recording gets erased when something lovely and new is recorded. I will therefore be able to effortlessly break my old, undesirable behaviors when I record in this way.

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