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from Natural Life magazine, September/October 2008
From the Editor's Desk

Natural Life Editor Wendy PriesnitzThere's Anger in the Air

Is the world getting angrier or am I just getting more observant? Or thinned skinned? Or angry? Politics are angry, highways are angry, emailers and chat groupies and bloggers are angry, talk radio is angry, supermarket shoppers are angry. Art is angry, music is angry. Even little kids are angry.

Oh, says I with my usual first reaction to most things: Maybe there’s a book here! Um, no. There already are enough. Plug “anger” into the search line at amazon.com and you get 321,547 books and articles – everything from Anger Management For Dummies to Harriet Lerner’s wonderfully useful The Dance of Anger. Unfortunately, there are also lots of anger books aimed at children. But managing their anger is not what they need; they feel invisible and ignored by adults and are desperate to be seen and known, rather than taken to yet another lesson, sports activity or anti-bullying session.

But why are the rest of us so angry and impatient? Well, we’re living in anxious times, when fear about the future is hard to shake: What’s going to happen with global warming, the economy, terrorism, the energy crisis, the food crisis, the wars? And maybe we feel angry and frustrated because the problems seem too huge and we don’t know what we can do to fix them. There are other reasons, I think, or at least mitigating factors. Many of us are living life too fast, trying to cram too many things into a frantic day, too tightly scheduled to allow time for anything to go wrong or to get in our way, let alone to breathe. Plus, many of those books (that is, the ones that don’t preach the opposite) tell us that by expressing our anger we are living authentically and that swallowing it will make us sick.

Beyond that, these authors might have a point. Maybe we’re not being angry and aggressive enough! Given all the crises out there, maybe we should be out in the streets angrily screaming for change. The New York Times writer Bob Herbert has said that our “anger quotient is much too low.” If, by that, he means that we should pressure our leaders to make this a safer planet, I agree.

However, I’m not angry (well, not most of the time). And that’s because in the midst of the doom and gloom there is much positive news these days. Perhaps the negative is creating the positive as people begin to figure out how to make lemonade from all the lemons being thrown at us. Whatever the reason, there is so much good news that we didn’t have room to tell it all in this issue. Among the things we haven’t mentioned in our news section are the remarkably fast way in which shoppers worldwide are remembering to use cloth bags and other reusable containers – and that retailers are moving away from plastic; a flurry of laws against health- and environment-destroying things like cosmetic pesticides and smoking in vehicles; new carbon taxes; a recent government pledge to protect an unprecedented 225,000 square kilometers of northern boreal forest; how folks are rapidly ditching their SUVs and Hummers; the growing movement toward making biodiesel from crop waste instead of food crops…you get the picture.

So be angry if it helps. But while pointing that anger in a useful direction, we should all take a deep breath, smile and calm down. We’re on the right path.

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Natural Life Editor Wendy Priesnitz
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