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Health, Well-Being & Alternative Medicine
When Anger is Healthy
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<blockquote data-quote="Carl Miller" data-source="post: 114269" data-attributes="member: 4986"><p>i want to explore the idea that <a href="http://www.katinkahesselink.net/kr/fear.html" target="_blank"><u>thought and time are the root of fear.</u></a></p><p></p><p>And love it seems is the total absence of fear.</p><p></p><p>Biologically this is true to some extent. Fear and anger are both biologically expressed with only one hormone: adrenaline. The response to adrenaline is either fight (anger) or flight (fear).</p><p></p><p>So if looked at biologically this would mean that love is the absence of adrenaline. This makes some sense. Fear certainly makes a lot of spiritual practice harder. Breathing for instance becomes hard when fear takes over. Focusing on the needs of someone else is harder when we are scared for our own lives, livelihood or whatever. In other words: fear makes love harder.</p><p></p><p>Fear is wired into the biochemistry of our bodies. Fear has been a necessary part of physical survival. Fear provided that extra amount of strength, speed, and agility to save our pre-history ancestor from being eaten by animals like for example a tiger. Those same physiological reactions are present in our modern-day bodies which respond just as strongly to psychological fears as they do to physical fears.</p><p></p><p>The tiger is real – our psychological fears are not. Our bodies, not knowing the difference, treat them as one and the same. Thus, if we are to change our relationship with psychological fear, it is necessary to find the source of our fear and heal it.</p><p></p><p>I agree to some extent: our psychological fears are partly realistic. For instance, with the present economic difficulties many people are afraid of their jobs or their business, a crash in the stock market , going personally bankrupt etc..</p><p></p><p>Also it is seen that once people become afraid – they infect each other. I have seen corporates and institutions where fear is the ruling factor.</p><p></p><p>I don’t think that kind of fear has anything to do with love.</p><p></p><p>It’s not the opposite of love, but rather on a different level altogether. Just pondering...</p><p></p><p>Deceptions and fear lead to aggressity, Jaden. Just as you posted.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Carl Miller, post: 114269, member: 4986"] i want to explore the idea that [URL='http://www.katinkahesselink.net/kr/fear.html'][U]thought and time are the root of fear.[/U][/URL] And love it seems is the total absence of fear. Biologically this is true to some extent. Fear and anger are both biologically expressed with only one hormone: adrenaline. The response to adrenaline is either fight (anger) or flight (fear). So if looked at biologically this would mean that love is the absence of adrenaline. This makes some sense. Fear certainly makes a lot of spiritual practice harder. Breathing for instance becomes hard when fear takes over. Focusing on the needs of someone else is harder when we are scared for our own lives, livelihood or whatever. In other words: fear makes love harder. Fear is wired into the biochemistry of our bodies. Fear has been a necessary part of physical survival. Fear provided that extra amount of strength, speed, and agility to save our pre-history ancestor from being eaten by animals like for example a tiger. Those same physiological reactions are present in our modern-day bodies which respond just as strongly to psychological fears as they do to physical fears. The tiger is real – our psychological fears are not. Our bodies, not knowing the difference, treat them as one and the same. Thus, if we are to change our relationship with psychological fear, it is necessary to find the source of our fear and heal it. I agree to some extent: our psychological fears are partly realistic. For instance, with the present economic difficulties many people are afraid of their jobs or their business, a crash in the stock market , going personally bankrupt etc.. Also it is seen that once people become afraid – they infect each other. I have seen corporates and institutions where fear is the ruling factor. I don’t think that kind of fear has anything to do with love. It’s not the opposite of love, but rather on a different level altogether. Just pondering... Deceptions and fear lead to aggressity, Jaden. Just as you posted. [/QUOTE]
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