Stoic Guide to Anger Management Flashcards
1/ Engage in preemptive meditation: think about what situations trigger your anger, and decide ahead of time how to deal with them.
2/ Check anger as soon as you feel its symptoms. Don’t wait, or it will get out of control.
3/ Associate with serene people, as much as possible; avoid irritable or angry ones. Moods are infective.
4/ Play a musical instrument, or purposefully engage in whatever activity relaxes your mind. A relaxed mind does not get angry.
5/ Seek environments with pleasing, not irritating, colours. Manipulating external circumstances actually has an effect on our moods.
6/ Don’t engage in discussions when you are tired, you will be more prone to irritation, which can then escalate into anger.
7/ Don’t start discussions when you are thirsty or hungry, for the same reason.
8/ Deploy self-deprecating humour, our main weapon against the unpredictability of the Universe, and the predictable nastiness of some of our fellow human beings.
9/ Practise cognitive distancing – what Seneca calls ‘delaying’ your response – by going for a walk, or retire to the bathroom, anything that will allow you a breather from a tense situation.
10/ Change your body to change your mind: deliberately slow down your steps, lower the tone of your voice, impose on your body the demeanour of a calm person.