My knee-jerk reaction, which I at first followed, was to leave a comment. "Don't you see that this is just more bitching? How about you just enjoy your own life and don't worry about other people's bitching?"
Not a split second later, I realized I was doing it too, by leaving the comment.
So, I started to add to the comment, that it was super funny how I got caught in the self-sustaining bitching whirlpool of it all.
Then, a few seconds into that, realized the ludicrous nature of even that, and deleted the whole thing.
Alright then, great - why am I writing about it here then?!
Stick with me, this is a pretty big gratitude, and potent enough to stop me in my tracks, and get me to actually write a gratitude post, which to be honest, I've been too fried and busy to keep up doing lately.
In the space of that two to three minutes between see stimulus, deliver automatic response, edit it, rescind it utterly, and lastly achieve mindful silence, is one of the practices that I work really, really hard to cultivate within myself. It's a constant fight, endless work, but so very worthwhile.
I'm struggling to name for you exactly what the practice is. Perhaps it's called emotional hygiene.
It's so easy to get caught up in attachments, in shenpa. That particular meme is an example of the anger shenpa, which is an expression of outrage about anything in one's life. It can be inward focused or based on something outside oneself, about another, or life in general.
Examples:
Here are some nice juicy inner ones that I have been hooked with lately:
"Why am I so fucking fat? I hate that. Once I'm thinner, eating right and working out again I'll be happy."
"I better start writing again. I can't stand it when I don't write."
"I hate when I feel like I treat my partners like sexual gratification ATM's. I'm going to alienate them if I don't get that under wraps."
"I better get all the various things related to moving from my old house to my new house right, so I don't cause myself a giant financial disaster."
And now for a bunch of saucy outer examples:
"Why are people such goddamn sheep, ready to be angry at whatever everyone else is angry about?"
"Why do so many overly religious people not see how they use their religion to fuck up the lives of other people?"
"Why is social media such a cesspool of group think, vanity, and human ugliness?"
"I wish (estranged relative) would just not be such an intolerant asshole so I could do something about being estranged from them."
The thing I did when I deleted my comment to the picture above was something I learned about from Pema Chödrön in Getting Unstuck. I caught myself swept up in reaction and mindlessness and then consciously made the decision to stay. What I mean is, to stay with the feelings I felt, ride them like a rough current on a river, and see them through before acting. I realized that the little electric zing of unhappiness and snarky response I was feeling to the picture came from me. Then I realized that even the attempt to point it out was that same feeling, just misdirected a bit.