Initially I had the idea that if I could vent my spleen about life events it would be a cathartic exercise. |
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However, don't expect a cathartic payoff, because there is little emotional messiness in this largely intellectual exercise. |
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Secondly, I am demob-happy at the prospect of a fortnight's holiday, and am thus in no mood for cathartic purging. |
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But such cathartic vengeance would do nothing to curb the menace of transnational terrorism. |
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As with Greek drama, it may be emotionally cathartic but it is never soothing. |
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All people, including Chinese people, crave the cathartic release that laughter provides. |
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The ridiculous screenplay offers two cathartic scenes, both of which feature characters giving lengthy soliloquies. |
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But beyond the monetary considerations, her renaming ordeal has also proved emotionally cathartic. |
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Forgiveness is cathartic and releases tension, while revenge perpetuates and increases tension. |
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Today, audiences prefer big statements, cathartic effects and emotional exhibitionism. |
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As the drummer spits out a cacophony of quick-wristed rhythms and slashing fills, the music rages on to a cathartic finale. |
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In Germany the trial was an essential cathartic process crucial to post-war regeneration. |
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The cathartic experience of venting the spleen at a match can return the supporter to the bosom of the family a calmer individual. |
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An explosive guitar solo encapsulates the bottled-up emotions bubbling over in a powerfully cathartic and concentrated manner. |
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The fresh root is astringent, cathartic, emetic, emmenagogue and odontalgic. |
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Well I suppose at once extremely harrowing to give the evidence but in many ways extremely cathartic to do so. |
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Perhaps this is why the film is best seen in a crowded theatre, where the infectiousness of cathartic emotion can have full play. |
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Would we then defer to his expressed wishes and enact a scene of cathartic cruelty? |
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For many, the experience is clearly cathartic and helps release pent-up emotions. |
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Gullible by nature, they are easily swayed by catchy slogans and start seeking cathartic relief in communal frenzy. |
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Screaming and shredding are cathartic, yes, but nothing says sensitive like an acoustic guitar. |
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In the end, you will hear fellow theatergoers weeping all around you, the sound muffled only by that of your own cathartic sobbing. |
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However I am about to change jobs and pressing the delete button a thousand times on my PC at work has been most cathartic. |
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There are several cathartic therapies that involve primal screaming, rebirthing, or reparenting. |
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Then there are the long years in the Far East with his dependable wife Betty, and his cathartic reaction to her sudden death. |
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After all it seems to me that it is aggressive people who seem to display aggressive cathartic behaviour. |
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From my own experience, I can confirm that possession is certainly both abreactive and cathartic. |
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I haven't cried like that in a very, very long time. Here's fervently hoping it serves as some kind of cathartic purge. |
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The words, or maybe it's the gravelly voice, act as a cathartic, and the woman begins to cry. |
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The third type of intervention is administration of cathartic agents to increase gastrointestinal motility and hasten the expulsion of the toxin. |
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The poem has been quite cathartic because I have had all those ideas for the images in my head for years. |
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This fungus is supposedly edible but faded forms can be confused with R. formosa, which has a strong cathartic effect when eaten. |
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The play is supposed to build to a final cathartic spilling of secrets and emotions. |
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The opening triumvirate is as strong as any string of songs he's written, and the wistful finality of the sweetly cathartic title track foreshadows a disappointing comedown. |
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He abandoned the cathartic technique for good in favour of the free association of ideas. |
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Existential emptiness has submerged the populations in an addled lethargy, interrupted from time to time by agonizing cathartic convulsions. |
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And the itsy-bitsy spider endured mild physical damage But also a cathartic sense of vulnerability. |
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Whatever the precipitant, however, there is a widespread belief that crying is cathartic. |
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But then it started to feel cathartic, this process of putting all sorts of unnecessary chaos into a box to send away forever. |
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There is little room for ambiguity and certainly no cathartic moments. |
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You talk about the cathartic power of music, for instance, about violent impulse that you exorcise through music. |
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Some participants reported a cathartic effect from preparing their statements. |
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The vocals blend into the acoustics and the songs stretch themselves out to the cathartic ending. |
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For many, the cathartic effect of admitting to others that they have a problem at all is a big step towards recovery. |
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In dealing with hurtful speech, universities encourage a plethora of speech to play a cathartic role. |
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Painting played a major role in enabling Heather to cope with her illness, and provided a cathartic outlet. |
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Communicated by pervasive mass media, the ritual of conceding defeat and declaring victory becomes the election's cathartic dénouement. |
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The art experience can be cathartic and therapeutic for individuals and whole groups. |
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The cathartic power of music, its healing aspects and its inherent educative capacity is evident even today. |
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When I sit down to write a song I never know whether the act of writing is going to be a cathartic experience or not. |
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And that we needed the performing arts in a healthy society because of their cathartic role. |
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I know the things I'm doing today with Africa are of value, but playing a concert is absolutely cathartic and deeply satisfying. |
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In putting a light-hearted spotlight on inter-ethnic prejudice, videos like these can serve a cathartic function in society. |
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As an expression of community solidarity, and as a cathartic public moment of defiance in the face of the threat of personal loss, it is a powerful symbol. |
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It was a great, great, great show, a very cathartic release. |
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We were witnessing the cathartic expression of raw experience that could be the foundation of a profoundly moving work and perhaps one day it will. |
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Furthermore, a substantial body of social research reports that engaging in cathartic expressions of anger does not eradicate aggressive urges but rather escalates them. |
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Since sodium phosphate is an osmotic cathartic agent, there is the risk of intravascular volume reduction due to the production of a large effluent. |
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Participants 50 years and older with an indication for colonoscopy underwent cathartic preparation of the colon before CTC followed by regular colonoscopy. |
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Gastrointestinal decontamination with activated charcoal and a cathartic may be useful in acute exposures if the drug was taken orally within the previous 60 minutes. |
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The acknowledgment of these crimes, which came as part of an amnesty for them, was a cathartic moment for El Salvador. |
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Baring souls and exposing warts is no longer a cathartic exercise reserved solely for singer songwriters and soul chanteuses. |
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It was a cathartic moment for the brand, though far from a guarantee to help restore it to its glory days. |
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In that way that was cathartic too, to sort of stitch up all those pieces and see how that is. |
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There was something cathartic about deleting this 2,500-word monster of a farewell, and resolving to live. |
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Hovering in the twilight zone between satire and ridicule, this medley is both entertaining and an opportunity for a cathartic laugh at troubling issues. |
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It would have been inexpressibly cathartic had India, after liberating Hyderabad in September 1948, captured and tried the Nizam. |
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We might at first imagine it as the sestina's final cathartic pinnacle. |
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It started as a mild chuckle, elevated itself to a chortle, then blossomed into the longest, loudest, most cathartic hilarity he had ever experienced. |
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Much of my storytelling and ruminations about my father have been cathartic, a new stage of grieving a loss from which I've never really recovered. |
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Mr. Reubens, as a rock concert promoter, gets to pop his cork, spewing expletives with a patently cathartic force. |
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Some of the deaths in this gory Game of Thrones finale were cathartic, such as Arya Stark's stabby dispatchment of Sir Meryn Trant, or Ramsay's girlfriend taking a long walk off a short battlement. |
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Using the Orange pomander allows the informational content of past experience to be accessed, without brining emotionally cathartic expects into the present. This opens the door to insight. |
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Best Actress winners must cry early and often, and they must have at least one scene where they unload on someone in a sobbing, cathartic, love-drenched fury. |
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We're both very strong believers in writing being cathartic so after a horrible event it's something that feels very natural to do to make sense of it. |
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Despite the occasional attempt, he never again attained the savage, cathartic energy of the Rite nor the spectacular succès de scandale it created. |
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If significant ingestion suspected, and the animal is asymptomatic, consider induction of emesis or gastric lavage and administration of activated charcoal, cathartic and enema to limit absorption. |
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Cusk preserves the outward form of a drama about a woman driven to kill her own children but radically alters the climax to deny us cathartic satisfaction. |
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But, he argues, the turmoil may be cathartic in restructuring markets, prompting decisive policy responses and speeding the reordering of the financial system to make the world more stable. |
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We should however acknowledge that 'trash' programmes, from real TV to the freest of the 'free radio', have a cathartic value that has always been extolled in the most controlled societies. |
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This was cathartic, a daily brain dump that kept all the recipients in the loop on Tricia's progress and me from exploding from all the stress. |
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Yet it is a mistake to succumb: whilst undoubtedly cathartic, biting back only lends legitimacy to the extremist narrative, thereby fueling and protracting the problem. |
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Perhaps the Alliance should take courage, and take a leaf from the EU's book, whose recent constitutional crisis has had a cathartic effect on the process of European integration, rather than stopping it. |
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There are several versions of CISM offered, but there appears to be some common elements that are important: cathartic sharing of the story, social support, and adaptive coping. |
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I thought it was perhaps a cathartic address, but I will settle for the notion that his remarks were fertilizing in an atmosphere where one badly demanded ideas. |
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It became evident that the interview was a cathartic experience for the individual, as it often provided an opportunity for a sense of closure on these difficult times. |
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Although recording the song was cathartic for all the band members, Aaron never publicly admitted that the punk rock anthem was written about him. |
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It was cathartic – a release like unstoppering a bottle. |
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While this number desperately cries out for a Kelly Clarkson-like cathartic release, Duff shows what doesn't kill her makes her sappier. |
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The Affair had stirred in France a desire for the cathartic chiliasm of teleological redemption. |
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This experience has been cathartic for some and catastrophic for others. |
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For it is necessary that he who is adorned by the cathartic virtues, should abstain from doing any thing precedaneously in conjunction with body. |
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The author considers purgen generally reliable as a cathartic, but one attended with some danger. |
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