Quotes about Anger
I thought she'd get angry then, but all she said was, "You are not unique in the universe. No one has an easy time in life. But maybe God has effed up—as you put it—your life for a reason." "And I can hardly fucking wait to find out what that is," I said.
— Margaret Atwood
I have the choice to be angry at God for what i don't have, or be thankful for what i do have
— Nick Vujicic
We praise a man who feels angry on the right grounds and against the right persons and also in the right manner at the right moment and for the right length of time.
— Aristotle
Quite a lot of our contemporary culture is actually shot through with a resentment of limits and the passage of time, anger at what we can't do, fear or even disgust at growing old.
— Rowan Williams
It's so important to realize that every time you get upset, it drains your emotional energy. Losing your cool makes you tired. Getting angry a lot messes with your health.
— Joyce Meyer
People who flush easily become even more agitated when they feel themselves getting hot under the collar, and they quickly lose to their opponents.
— Anne Frank
It won't take long before I explode with pent-up rage.
— Anne Frank
I continued to sit with the open book in my hand and wonder why I was filled with so much anger and hate that I had to confide it all to you. I tried to understand the Anne of last year and make apologies for her, because as long as I leave you with these accusations and don't attempt to explain what prompted them, my conscience won't be clear.
— Anne Frank
Kitty, if only you knew how I sometimes boil under so many gibes and jeers. And I don't know how long I shall be able to stifle my rage. I shall just blow up one day. Still
— Anne Frank
Boy, the young are angry at us. Good. This is what usually changes the world, although it's a new experience to be the us the young are mad at.
— Anne Lamott
I will be happy to give my life to see some of these white devils die.
— Malcolm X
Mr. Charnock said: Men that are great in the world are quick in passion, and are not so ready to forgive an injury, or bear with an offender, as one of a meaner rank. It is a want of power over that man's self that makes him do unbecoming things upon a provocation. A prince that can bridle his passions is a king over himself as well as over his subjects. God is slow to anger because great in power. He has no less power over Himself than over His creatures.
— AW Pink