The Ifior Circle was born on 7 July 1977 in Genoa and, in forty years of interventions by the Guides, has presented a vast body of teachings published in over sixty volumes of messaging.
To manage an anger spike you must have understood it 11 [A35]
Q – I was reading in a book that our brain learns certain behaviors through imitation, certain behavioral responses to situations it finds itself experiencing. As a child, the child sees how the mother reacts to a certain situation and then puts it into action again.
Anger, fear and their peaks 10 [A34]
[…] Sure, anger is the expression of the akasic; you don't have to understand something about anger, you have to understand what it is that gives rise to anger.
Anger in the cycle of vibration 9 [A33]
What you call emotions aren't actually emotions, but they are the reactions you have within the physical plane, which you defined emotions in your language because you didn't see any other better way to define them, but emotions don't belong to the physical plane , reactions belong to the physical plane.
Anger 7: when it lasts over time [A31]
D – We speak of anger as the peak in which one gets angry, yes; but if we talk about rage that drags on, so that it's not the anger of the momentary peak, which I don't know what it is: frustration, unexpressed anger, or anger that one has with oneself that one cannot resolve…
Anger 6: knowing it to help [A30]
D – But one of the very physical characteristics of anger is that, when the peak occurs, it is as if the physical, or instinctive, or in any case less rational part takes over our ability to modulate, to slow ourselves down.
Anger 5: His Transformation [A29]
I agree that anger is an emotion, and aggression is an emotion, but first I would like to stay a little longer on the physical part; that – who knows why – you don't seem to care about! It's something we fail to understand: but why shouldn't you care how you express your anger?!