Rightful Indignation
And there are so many reasons to feel indignant. It is that completely balanced mix of anger and contempt for something that is viewed as unworthy of anything but one's basest abhorrence. The issue provoking it has to be of enough significance to evoke the feeling because indignation is quite contrary to indifference. It shows that one cares enough to feel negatively and by itself is a strong feeling.
There are moments when just anger does not suffice. The overwhelming logic of why one is feeling angry mitigates the anger itself and turns it into something a little less sharp but no less strong. Issues based on moral judgement or encounters that bring out disgust tinged with vexation would be good examples. Arguing against an obtuse opponent who refuses to see reason or admit defeat comes to mind as does an incident where an individual who had kicked a stray dog tried to defend his action.
The nuances in feelings, even if negative ones...just keep getting lost! Here's holding onto some 'rightful indignation'!
There are moments when just anger does not suffice. The overwhelming logic of why one is feeling angry mitigates the anger itself and turns it into something a little less sharp but no less strong. Issues based on moral judgement or encounters that bring out disgust tinged with vexation would be good examples. Arguing against an obtuse opponent who refuses to see reason or admit defeat comes to mind as does an incident where an individual who had kicked a stray dog tried to defend his action.
The nuances in feelings, even if negative ones...just keep getting lost! Here's holding onto some 'rightful indignation'!
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