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Where in your body?
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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I'm rarely angry but if I am I'd say I feel it in my face the most? I'm not too sure.
If I'm sad I feel it in the chest and stomach. It's kind of similar to butterflies but very unpleasant and painful. |
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"I'm rarely angry but if I am I'd say I feel it in my face the most? I'm not too sure.
If I'm sad I feel it in the chest and stomach. It's kind of similar to butterflies but very unpleasant and painful."
It reminds me of the feeling when you think you're going to fall. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"I'm rarely angry but if I am I'd say I feel it in my face the most? I'm not too sure.
If I'm sad I feel it in the chest and stomach. It's kind of similar to butterflies but very unpleasant and painful.
It reminds me of the feeling when you think you're going to fall. "
Yes definitely relate to that feeling! It's bloody horrible. |
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"I'm rarely angry but if I am I'd say I feel it in my face the most? I'm not too sure.
If I'm sad I feel it in the chest and stomach. It's kind of similar to butterflies but very unpleasant and painful.
It reminds me of the feeling when you think you're going to fall. "
Like an adrenaline rush? Fear? |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"I'm rarely angry but if I am I'd say I feel it in my face the most? I'm not too sure.
If I'm sad I feel it in the chest and stomach. It's kind of similar to butterflies but very unpleasant and painful.
It reminds me of the feeling when you think you're going to fall.
Yes definitely relate to that feeling! It's bloody horrible."
And really nauseous too. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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I don't think I've raged in a long long time so couldn't say. For deep sorrow though, a out in the stomach or a hole in your heart are very apt terms... I wonder why you feel it there, biologically I mean. |
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Solar plexus, all across my chest, deep into my heart and to the pit of my tummy for sorrow, I swear at times I can feel it in my throat and eyes too.
Rage... hmm, I feel rage in my shoulders, throat, chest and arms. |
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"Solar plexus, all across my chest, deep into my heart and to the pit of my tummy for sorrow, I swear at times I can feel it in my throat and eyes too.
Rage... hmm, I feel rage in my shoulders, throat, chest and arms."
When I've been given adrenaline before I've felt it in my throat so could be similar to that. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Where in your body do you experience rage? What about extreme sorrow?"
Your cognitive processes lead to a emotional reaction and a physiological response
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By *stella OP Woman
over a year ago
London |
"Where in your body do you experience rage? What about extreme sorrow?
Your cognitive processes lead to a emotional reaction and a physiological response
"
Where in your body are you experiencing the physiological response to the cognitive process engendering rage, and what about sorrow? |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Where in your body do you experience rage? What about extreme sorrow?
Your cognitive processes lead to a emotional reaction and a physiological response
"
That didn’t answer the question |
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By *eliWoman
over a year ago
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I don't think I've ever felt rage. Anger sure but not rage. Sorrow though? Sorrow hurts a lot. For me it feels like I'm drowning, my heart feels heavy and I can't breathe properly and my throat starts to close up. It makes me feel like there's a heavy cloud spreading through my body that hurts.
Sorrow is awful and not something I want to experience again any time soon. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Where in your body are you experiencing the physiological response to the cognitive process engendering rage, and what about sorrow? "
Anger triggers the body's 'fight or flight' response. Typical physical responses include increased heart rate and shortness of breath in order to taster pump blood around the body and increase oxygen to the muscles. This helps to prepare to deal with a threat.
Typical side effects include butterflies in the stomach, shaking (adrenaline), tunnel vision, headaches (often after the adrenaline has worn off) a tight chest, muscle aching, dizziness (due to the imbalance of oxygen and carbon dioxide) |
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By *stella OP Woman
over a year ago
London |
"Where in your body are you experiencing the physiological response to the cognitive process engendering rage, and what about sorrow?
Anger triggers the body's 'fight or flight' response. Typical physical responses include increased heart rate and shortness of breath in order to taster pump blood around the body and increase oxygen to the muscles. This helps to prepare to deal with a threat.
Typical side effects include butterflies in the stomach, shaking (adrenaline), tunnel vision, headaches (often after the adrenaline has worn off) a tight chest, muscle aching, dizziness (due to the imbalance of oxygen and carbon dioxide) "
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By *eliWoman
over a year ago
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"Where in your body are you experiencing the physiological response to the cognitive process engendering rage, and what about sorrow?
Anger triggers the body's 'fight or flight' response. Typical physical responses include increased heart rate and shortness of breath in order to taster pump blood around the body and increase oxygen to the muscles. This helps to prepare to deal with a threat.
Typical side effects include butterflies in the stomach, shaking (adrenaline), tunnel vision, headaches (often after the adrenaline has worn off) a tight chest, muscle aching, dizziness (due to the imbalance of oxygen and carbon dioxide) "
I think the OP is asking for a personalised response rather than a medical explanation on the effects of sorrow/rage ie how it makes you feel. |
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Aside from the unsurprising negative effect on mental health I find rage often affects both my chest - as in feeling tight, uncomfortable, thumping and ready to burst (which can be very disconcerting) - and my hands, which literally shake uncontrollably. Physically, sorrow for me feels more like a dreadful knawing 'emptiness', similar to being genuinely hungry but ramped up ten fold and of course unlike actual hunger, there's no quick fix. Unfortunately, because both these emotions are stressful my digestive system is also often affected very badly in addition to the manifestations previously described. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Where in your body are you experiencing the physiological response to the cognitive process engendering rage, and what about sorrow?
Anger triggers the body's 'fight or flight' response. Typical physical responses include increased heart rate and shortness of breath in order to taster pump blood around the body and increase oxygen to the muscles. This helps to prepare to deal with a threat.
Typical side effects include butterflies in the stomach, shaking (adrenaline), tunnel vision, headaches (often after the adrenaline has worn off) a tight chest, muscle aching, dizziness (due to the imbalance of oxygen and carbon dioxide) "
You still didn’t answer the question |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"I think the OP is asking for a personalised response rather than a medical explanation on the effects of sorrow/rage ie how it makes you feel. "
I’m not sure I understand, sorry
Do you mean feeling as in emotionally, or feel as in physically?
Or do you mean feel as in what goes through your mind?
I do see things very scientifically so apologies for that! |
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By *stella OP Woman
over a year ago
London |
"I think the OP is asking for a personalised response rather than a medical explanation on the effects of sorrow/rage ie how it makes you feel.
I’m not sure I understand, sorry
Do you mean feeling as in emotionally, or feel as in physically?
Or do you mean feel as in what goes through your mind?
I do see things very scientifically so apologies for that! "
Meli is right. Apologies for not explaining better, I meant you personally, where do *you* feel it physically in your body when you feel rage and when you feel sorry. Not everyone feels it the same you see. I was interested in a personal and not generic response. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"I think the OP is asking for a personalised response rather than a medical explanation on the effects of sorrow/rage ie how it makes you feel.
I’m not sure I understand, sorry
Do you mean feeling as in emotionally, or feel as in physically?
Or do you mean feel as in what goes through your mind?
I do see things very scientifically so apologies for that! "
Come on mate, it’s not hard, where in your body do YOU feel these emotions, it’s personal to everyone |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"I think the OP is asking for a personalised response rather than a medical explanation on the effects of sorrow/rage ie how it makes you feel.
I’m not sure I understand, sorry
Do you mean feeling as in emotionally, or feel as in physically?
Or do you mean feel as in what goes through your mind?
I do see things very scientifically so apologies for that!
Meli is right. Apologies for not explaining better, I meant you personally, where do *you* feel it physically in your body when you feel rage and when you feel sorry. Not everyone feels it the same you see. I was interested in a personal and not generic response. "
Sorry about that |
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"Solar plexus, all across my chest, deep into my heart and to the pit of my tummy for sorrow, I swear at times I can feel it in my throat and eyes too.
Rage... hmm, I feel rage in my shoulders, throat, chest and arms.
When I've been given adrenaline before I've felt it in my throat so could be similar to that. "
That would make sense. |
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If I’m cross you will see it in my face, the way I stand changes, the shoulders tense up and the rage is in my chest and down my arms to my clenched hands.
When my partner suddenly passed away the sorrow I felt was physical, it hurt me all over, it twisted my heart and punched me physically in the stomach, I had body pains for months after, it hurt in my eyes and you could see the pain on my face, that shit was physical |
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Rage starts as a hot toe tapping flash in my feet, I start getting antsy the more angry I get as it trembles up my body, I have to change something by the time it reaches my chest because if it tips into my head I've already lost control and have waded in without any rational thinking whatsoever
True sorrow will always take my breath away as I gasp with grief and it feels like oxygen has disappeared from my lungs |
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"Where in your body do you experience rage? What about extreme sorrow?
Your cognitive processes lead to a emotional reaction and a physiological response
Where in your body are you experiencing the physiological response to the cognitive process engendering rage, and what about sorrow? "
Through my eyes .... |
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