Children & Anger (Notes)


Lost boy in the forest * …why was that important to remember?

Getting angry at Brody, what does he know of the difference?

There’s always a choice. They don’t know the difference. It’s easy for anger to become the norm, if that’s how you’re predisposed to behave — just as it’s easy to feel joy regularly, if you’re the type of person who habitually seeks it out.

And it’s like I always say: Thought becomes action, action becomes habit, habit becomes personality.

(* By the river, where I walked to escape from the noisy Caribbean day, at the pub I went to with BJ, Dan and Brody over Owen’s bday thing)