HUMANS 101

What We Can Learn From Our Rage

How attention can transform the energy of our anger

Katy Friedman Miller
Human Parts
Published in
7 min readNov 2, 2021

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Kali, Hindu Goddess of Destruction. Photo: Suprabhat Dutta/Getty Images

Attention is the most basic form of love; through it we bless and are blessed.
John Tarrant

When I was a young social worker, I often found myself doing some crazy tasks that I had no business doing. One of these was teaching a court-mandated parenting class to divorcing couples in the city of St. Louis, Missouri. A supervisor, who was also in her twenties, co-taught the class with me. Though neither of us were married or had children, our work entailed teaching parenting and anger management to actual parents.

So, Jen and I did our best to be entertaining. In the end, there were surprising moments of connection. One part of the class that Jen taught was about anger. We distributed a xeroxed handout of a hand-drawn tooth, which took up most of the page. It was a childlike drawing of a molar, labeled with the word “ANGER.”

Jen would say, “Anger is a tooth with two roots.” She pointed to the roots of the molar on the handout: “SADNESS” and “FEAR.”

Jen continued, “I know you’re thinking that’s not true. But really, if you take the time to consider it, it is. You know how you feel when your kid runs out by the street and there’s traffic and you snatch them back…

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Katy Friedman Miller
Human Parts

I’m a grief therapist and former hospice social worker. Sharing stories from life, death, and work and where they all intersect. TEDx talk at www.ted.com