We all feel anger from time to time and our sages have plenty to say on the subject. Here's a thought from our member Jeremy Phillips that was triggered by a recent event in his life.
A few days ago we had an uninvited visitor. A bee had found its way through our insect-proof netting and into our bathroom. If we were unhappy at this intrusion, the bee was even more so, emitting a harsh, unremitting buzz as it furiously circled the confines of its prison in search of a way out. It took a day or so before the bee had calmed down, settled on a hand-towel in sullen silence and allowing me to trap it inside a drinking glass and ease it gently out of the window.
I do not know whether bees actually feel anger, though in
human culture it is easy to label their frenetic buzz as a sign of anger.
Indeed, “angry buzzing” is something of a literary cliché. What I do know is
that this episode resonates with my understanding of Pirkei Avot.
While our sages, the foremost of whom is Rambam, are
unanimous in condemning anger, and we learn that anger is even a form of avodah
zarah (Shabbat 105b), the Tannaic authors of the mishnayot in Avot accept both
that anger exists and that we feel it. This is why Rabbi Eliezer does not
demand us never to be angry but instead urges us (at 2:15) אַל תְּהִי
נֽוֹחַ לִכְעוֹס (“Don’t be easy to anger”).
Going well beyond that, the anonymous author of Avot 5:17 teaches:
אַרְבַּע
מִדּוֹת בְּדֵעוֹת: נֽוֹחַ לִכְעוֹס וְנֽוֹחַ לֵרָצוֹת, יָצָא הֶפְסֵדוֹ
בִּשְׂכָרוֹ. קָשֶׁה לִכְעוֹס וְקָשֶׁה לֵרָצוֹת, יָצָא שְׂכָרוֹ בְּהֶפְסֵדוֹ.
קָשֶׁה לִכְעוֹס וְנֽוֹחַ לֵרָצוֹת, חָסִיד. נֽוֹחַ לִכְעוֹס וְקָשֶׁה לֵרָצוֹת,
רָשָׁע
There are four types of
temperaments. One who is easily angered and easily appeased—his loss cancels out
his reward. One whom it is difficult to anger and difficult to appease—his reward
cancels out his loss. One whom it is difficult to anger and is easily calmed
down is a chasid. One who is easily angered and is difficult to calm
down is wicked.
This clearly acknowledges that even a chasid will
feel anger. But he is not alone. Earlier in the fifth perek, at Avot 5:2-3, we
learn that God too gets angry—and that He is able to restrain His anger for
generation after generation.
All of this points to a principle that emerges from Rambam’s
Moreh Nevuchim: we can’t stop having feelings, ideas and emotions
entirely. If we could, we would no longer be functionally human. However, what
we can do is to take control over them once we have them.
The bee coming into my bathroom and buzzing around in
apparent rage and desperation is analogous to a powerful surge of anger that
comes into one’s head. At this point we may not be amenable to rational
thought. This is why Rabbi Shimon ben Elazar teaches (Avot 4:23)
אַל תְּרַצֶּה
אֶת חֲבֵרֶֽךָ בְּשַֽׁעַת כַּעֲסוֹ
Do not appease your friend at the
height of his anger.
But, once we have controlled our anger and composed ourselves, we can view things—including our own feelings and the circumstances that generated them—in a more reasonable manner. To put it another way, once the bee calms down, its problem can be addressed with a happy outcome for bee—and me.
