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"Many people literally stuff their anger-they keep it down by putting food on top of it. This process is similar to packing in wadding when loading a cannon - and the results can be just as explosive." - Love Hunger by F. Minirth
"Never go to bed mad. Stay up and fight." - Phyllis Diller
"Every minute you are angry, you lose sixty seconds of happiness." - anonymous
"Anger. It can explode like an erupting volcano; it can also sizzle slowly, breeding bitterness and resentment. It's sometimes disguised through sarcasm, grudges, fearfulness, or rebellion, but the long-term effects are always predictable. Physical health, mental well-being, and interpersonal relationships begin to deteriorate when anger is continually handled in a spiritually destructive manner. The emotion of anger in itself is not sin, for God is righteously indignant over man's sin every day. But the snare of human rage manifests our selfishness." - anonymous
"I'm supposed to hate something, but I'm not sure what. I wasn't even here last year, and I'm mad. - Marty Carter, safety for the Chicago Bears, on their rivalry with the Green Bay Packers
"It is the great duty of all Christians to put off anger. It unfits for duty…a man cannot wrestle with God and wrangle with his neighbor at the same time. Short sins often cost us long and sad sorrows." - Philip Henry
"In a 1994 article, 'War's Lethal Leftovers Threaten Europeans,' Associated Press reporter Christopher Burns writes: 'The bombs of World War II are still killing in Europe. They turn up - and sometimes blow up - at construction sites, in fishing nets, or on beaches fifty years after the guns fell silent. 'Hundreds of tons of explosives are recovered every year in France alone. Thirteen old bombs exploded in France last year, killing twelve people and wounding eleven, the Interior Minister said. 'I've lost two of my colleagues,' said Yvon Bouvet, who heads a government team in the Champagne-Ardennes region that defuses explosives from both World War I and II… 'Unexploded bombs become more dangerous with time, Bouvet said. 'With the corrosion inside, the weapon becomes more unstable, the detonator can be exposed.' What is true of lingering bombs is also true of lingering anger. Buried anger will explode when we least expect it." - Barry McGee, Anderson, California
Anger