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We’ve all felt it—that hot, sudden flash. The tightening in the chest. The rush of thoughts that scream of injustice, frustration, or hurt. Anger is one of our most primal and powerful emotions, and the common advice we get is to either suppress it (“Don’t be angry!”) or to let it out (“Vent your rage!”).

But what if both approaches are missing the point? What if anger isn’t a boulder we must push down or throw, but something far lighter, far more transient?

I was once given a piece of advice that changed my relationship with my own emotions: “Anger is like a cloud in the sky. When you meet it with a bit of awareness instead of judgement, you set yourself free.”

Let’s sit with that for a moment.

Think of your mind as the vast, open sky—always present, inherently clear and calm. The thoughts and feelings that pass through are merely weather. Joy can be a bright sunbeam, sadness a soft rain, and anger? Anger is a dark, turbulent cloud.

Our instinctual reaction to that dark cloud is judgement. We see it and we think, “Oh no, not again. I shouldn’t feel this way. This is bad.” We tense up. We might try to ignore it, to pretend the cloud isn’t there (spoiler: it never works). Or, we might grab onto it, feeding it with more stories of why we’re right to be angry, until it grows into a full-blown storm that we then unleash on the world.

Judgement is what gives the cloud its weight and its power. It’s the act of conflating the weather with the sky itself. We forget the clear sky and believe, temporarily, that we are the storm cloud.

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But awareness… awareness is different.

Awareness is the simple, almost gentle act of looking up and noting, without alarm, “Ah, a cloud. There is anger.” It is the profound shift from being in the emotion to being aware of the emotion. You are not the passing weather; you are the sky that holds it.

This isn’t about bypassing or denying your anger. It’s about meeting it with curiosity instead of conflict. When you stop judging the feeling as “bad,” you can actually understand it. You can ask, “What is this cloud telling me? What need of mine feels unmet? What boundary was crossed?”

By creating that tiny space of non-judgmental awareness, you accomplish two liberating things:

1. You break the automatic reaction. Between the trigger and your response, there is now a moment of choice. You are no longer a puppet jerked by the strings of emotion.
2. You allow the emotion to move. Clouds, by their very nature, are transient. They form, they change, and they pass. An emotion met with open awareness is acknowledged and felt, and because it isn’t fed by a storyline of judgement, it will naturally begin to dissipate on its own.

This week, when you feel that familiar heat rise, try it. Pause. Take a breath. See if you can notice the anger as a temporary cloud in your vast inner sky. Don’t fight it. Don’t feed it. Just watch it with a quiet mind.

You might just find that in letting the cloud be, without judgement, you aren’t setting the anger free. You are setting yourself free.

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