Instead of letting your anger take over when you’re not satisfied with the things that are happening, when people are not acting in ways that are wise and conducive to true happiness, you try to get your wisdom to take over.
"In our practice, we try to have goodwill [mettā] for all beings,
which means that we not only wish that they be happy, but also that
they create the causes for true happiness. Otherwise, the happiness is
not going to happen. You have to understand happiness in the context of
karma. Our goodwill for all beings doesn’t mean that they will all act
in good ways or that they will all be happy. We’re trying to make that
our underlying intention as we deal with our own mind, as we deal with
other people so that all our actions come from a skillful motivation.
An
important part of this training is to realize that the opposite of
goodwill should not be ill will. In other words, when people are not
acting in ways that are conducive to happiness, we don’t have ill will
for them. The alternative should be equanimity, which doesn’t mean
indifference. It means learning to put certain things aside, learning to
put your hopes and preferences aside, and to look at the situation: What can be done? What can’t be done? What are your priorities?
When
your priorities are clear, you realize that some things are more
important than others. The things that are not important you have to put
off to the side. This is actually the most effective way of getting
things done. I was reading about a woman general in the Army whose
policy every day was to rank the ten most important things that had to
be done that day from one to ten, and then she’d cross out everything
from three on down, to focus on the top two. That was how she got things
done.
In this way, instead of letting your anger take over when
you’re not satisfied with the things that are happening, when people are
not acting in ways that are wise and conducive to true happiness, you
try to get your wisdom to take over."
~ Thanissaro Bhikkhu "In Accordance with the Dhamma"
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