When the anger is healthy?
One of the most negative in all of the emotions-coming right from the lymbic primitive part of the brain the anger is almost uncontrollable and its effects can be unpredictable.
But recent researches point out that repressing or even suppressing anger invariably results in considerable damage to the nervous system.
One of these studies is carried out by Harvard Study of Adult Development from the Harvard University, USA.
The research consisted in monitoring the lives of 824 male adults and female since 1965.
They noticed people overrepressing their frustrations are 3 times more likely to giving up their careers and developing a tendency to disregard their personal emotional lives.
While people who learned how to explore and channel their anger showed a tendency to get settled down in their professional lives and even in their sentimental and emotional lives. Having enthusiasm into living and share your experiences, good relationships, getting out of your shelf, come into life, enjoy living, these things can be a transformed hate that turned into positive things.
Is it possible to go on living without emotions? Emotions are reactions, aren't they? And are reactions actual?
Can we consider emotions belonging to reality? One wonders, one laughs, one reacts, one enjoys nature, one listens to music and this very listening is a reaction, isn't it?
Yes, one reacts to the melody, one resonates to what is being said, to the letter, to the show put on by the band. All that thrilling feeling to belong to something, to be part of something, something shared by many, an ecstatic sensation to be fitting in, and be just like one mingled in the whole, having the blessings of a mystic atmosphere a collective mind provides.
It is not like so among the savages into a deep forest, those ancient rites of passage, don't they provide the same fulfilling feeling, the feeling of completion, to be satisfied just like a cozy and warm baby in the womb? Why exchanging such a feeling of security the tribe provides for a lonely journey towards nowhere? There's a mechanism behind emotions that includes memories, tradition. ]
Is it really possible to live without emotions? Is true love just an emotion? Is there actually a 'true love'?
Has true love anything to do to attachment?
Created by Dr. Carl Miller PHD in Psychology and Anthropology