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  2. Intermittent explosive disorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intermittent_explosive...

    Intermittent explosive disorder (IED) or Episodic dyscontrol syndrome (EDS) is a mental and behavioral disorder characterized by explosive outbursts of anger and/or violence, often to the point of rage, that are disproportionate to the situation at hand (e.g., impulsive shouting, screaming or excessive reprimanding triggered by relatively inconsequential events).

  3. Rage (emotion) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rage_(emotion)

    A person in rage may also experience tunnel vision, muffled hearing, increased heart rate, and hyperventilation. Their vision may also become "rose-tinted" (hence "seeing red"). They often focus only on the source of their anger. The large amounts of adrenaline and oxygen in the bloodstream may cause a person's extremities to shake.

  4. Incident (poem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incident_(poem)

    The Poetry Foundation says that the poem "throbs with anger", and considers it to be autobiographical. [2] The University of Baltimore's Baltimore Literary Heritage Project stated that it "paints an ugly—albeit accurate—picture" of early 20th-century Baltimore.

  5. If someone challenged me to describe 2020 in one adjective, I would go with confusing. The United States is smack-dab in the middle of an infodemic, wherein there’s an ever-changing narrative ...

  6. A Poison Tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Poison_Tree

    The poem's theme of duplicity and the inevitable conclusion is similar to the anonymous poem "There Was a man of Double Deed." [17] The image of the tree appears in many of Blake's poems and seems connected to his concept of the Fall of Man. It is possible to read the narrator as a divine figure who uses the tree to seduce mankind into disgrace.

  7. Indignation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indignation

    [5]: 290 The person feeling indignant wants to think about why they are feeling indignant so that they can figure out an appropriate response and pin-point whatever caused them to feel indignant. It has been stated that “when indignation does not express itself immediately as violence, it becomes an investigation of (and what he believes is a ...

  8. Pratigha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pratigha

    Pratigha (Sanskrit; Pali: paṭigha; Tibetan Wylie: khong khro) is a Buddhist term that is translated as "anger". It is defined as a hostile attitude towards sentient beings, towards frustration, and towards that which gives rise to one's frustrations; it functions as a basis for faultfinding, for negative actions, and for not finding a moment of peace or happiness.

  9. Angry young men - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angry_young_men

    As the Angry Young Men movement began to articulate these themes, the acceptance of related issues was more widespread. Osborne depicted these issues within his play through the eyes of his protagonist, Jimmy. Throughout the play, Jimmy was seeing "the wrong people go hungry, the wrong people be loved, the wrong people dying". [5]