Anger is a spark that instantly ignites our awareness of our limits. It arises when something we value is threatened or when we feel our dignity has been violated. In its brilliance, our personal truth is illuminated: what stirred our emotion reveals what truly matters to us. But this clarity can overflow if the spark doesn't find a channel.
Anger has a dual function. On the one hand, it can defend us: it compels us to set boundaries, to demand redress, to protect those who cannot do so for themselves. On the other hand, when we let it run wild, it can become a torrent of words or actions that harms others and, paradoxically, ourselves: it erodes relationships, clouds our judgment, and tarnishes the very cause it sought to defend.
The key is not to suppress it, but to channel it. To acknowledge it without shame and, at the same time, to create enough distance to choose the appropriate action. This involves breathing, pausing, reflecting: asking ourselves what outcome we desire, what is the best way to express our discomfort, and what boundaries we are willing to defend without resorting to destructiveness. In that brief silence, anger can become a constructive force: a call for reparation, a course correction, a defense of dignity that doesn't depend on humiliating the other person.
Anger also reveals old stories that reside within us: unhealed wounds, family lessons, unexamined fears. By examining these threads, we can understand that the emotion doesn't arise from a single event, but from a constellation of experiences. Working with this complexity requires patience and honesty: accepting that the emotion belongs to our human experience, and deciding, responsibly, how it translates into action.
On a collective level, anger can be a driving force for change if channeled ethically and purposefully. Indignation that is organized, that demands and proposes, has led to significant social transformations.
But if it transforms into resentment or indiscriminate expulsion, it loses its power and breaks down in confrontation. Thus, anger can be a teacher when we learn to listen to it without surrendering to its tyranny. It invites us to defend what we love and, at the same time, to cultivate a firm way of being without losing our humanity. In the end, true wisdom may not be about eliminating anger, but about understanding it and consciously coexisting with it, so that it illuminates without consuming.