Radical Honesty About Anger & Forgiveness, by Brad Blanton

 
 
 
 
 
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The main thing that keeps us attached to beliefs at lower levels of consciousness is our inability to forgive—which is our inability to get over belief about how things should or shouldn't be—which is the source of anger. So let's learn about anger.

If cultural transcendence is necessary to contact reality, and culture resides in the minds of individuals, and other participants in the culture disagree with any change because of attachment to the cultural values they have learned, both internal and external conflict are inevitable. This means anger is inevitable. Anger cannot be avoided; it has to be gone through and gotten over. Getting over being mad, or finding the capacity for forgiveness, is absolutely necessary for both individual personal growth and cultural change. So one of the most critical questions to be answered for any person willing to grow beyond their cultural provincialism is: How do you get over being mad?

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10/29/2008

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iseeu270

How does the author know that, " that the main thing that keeps us attached to beliefs at lower levels of consciousness is our inability to forgive?" Where is the evidence that anger must be gone through and gotten over? or is this simply an assumption. This is an very interesting article ,personally I do not believe that one has to forgive to have healing. I am aware that people can forgive by imagining the person that the anger or resentment is towards is sitting in a chair opposite and having an imaginary conversation from different postions including pretending imagining what the other person would say. I know people that simply choose to forgive and they do not carry resentment.

07 / 08 / 2009