
The Truth About Anger
Many people believe peace comes from controlling anger.
If I can just manage it…
Hide it…
Push it down…
Stay calm on the surface…
Then surely I will feel peaceful inside.
But that is often the calm of the duck above the water -
appearing still while exhausting itself underneath.
Because controlling anger is not the same as healing it.
You may look composed.
You may sound measured.
You may function well.
And yet inside:
Your body is tense.
Your mind is racing.
Your reactions are waiting for the next trigger.
Why?
Because anger rarely appears from nowhere.
Anger often rises to protect a part of you that once felt hurt, unseen, rejected, criticised, dismissed, or unsafe.
A younger part of you learned:
“I must fight to matter.”
“I must defend to be heard.”
“I must push back to survive.”
And for a time, anger may have helped.
It may have given courage.
It may have created movement.
It may have helped you stand up when you knew no other way.
But what once protected you can later imprison you.
You do not become peaceful by suppressing anger.
You become peaceful by understanding what the anger has been trying to protect.
This is where responsibility begins.
Not blaming your past.
Not justifying destructive reactions.
Not pretending nothing happened.
But asking:
What in me still feels unseen?
What pain am I still defending?
What younger part of me needs truth, safety, and leadership now?
Because the adult you now holds the key.
When you understand the wound, anger no longer needs to lead your life.
Then calm is no longer performance.
It becomes real.


