7/24/2023 0 Comments Emotion words![]() ![]() Staunch royalist Pam Martin, 80, a taxi driver and grandmother, said she couldn’t understand the lack of celebrations in some areas. I think people around here think London’s a bit detached from everything.” “I’ve lived in Canvey all my life, and my family, they’re all pro-royal. “It’s like the Brexit thing, isn’t it? We’re very patriotic and proud to be British around here,” he said. It’s also one of the country’s biggest backers of Brexit, with the third highest leave vote in 2016.įather-of-four Kevin Johnson, 59, a taxi driver, believes these stats reveal why it’s so pro-monarchy. The median age of people living in the area is 45, compared with the national average of 40, and it has the highest percentage of property ownership in England, according to ONS data. “It’s about looking after the people you’re reigning over and really doing the best for your country and people,” she said.Ĭastle Point, home to 89,600 people in 2021, is a traditionally Tory area that briefly swung to Labour during the Blair years and now has a significant proportion of independent local candidates. ![]() “We love all the pomp and ceremony,” said Coates, who made a trifle and a quiche in the monarch’s honour. Photograph: Sophia Evans/The ObserverĪt the Bread and Cheese pub in South Benfleet, which temporarily changed its name to the Charles and Camilla, a big screen in the garden went unwatched during the morning events after rain dampened appetites for outdoor celebrations.īut inside, retired charity worker Pat Coates, 73, and her daughter Emma, 42, sipped cocktails and watched events unfold. Other businesses arranged takeaway coronation afternoon teas while the Oak dental surgery in Canvey Island created a window display complete with a papier-mache Charles and stickers spelling out: “My dentist always told me I needed a crown.”Ĭhelsey Day, manager of The Bread and Cheese pub in South Benfleet, which was temporarily renamed The Charles and Camilla for the coronation. Churches held cake sales while residents knitted decorations to sit on top of postboxes, and someone spray-painted a crown on the hill outside Benfleet station. Some residents marked the occasion with street parties, although the local council website said there were about 30 planned for the coronation weekend, compared with 77 for the queen’s platinum jubilee. “I think people just like getting together and celebrating things,” he said.Īcross Castle Point, the excitement levels were similarly varied. Richard Miller, 52, a musical archive manager, said Charles seemed like an “all right bloke” but admitted that he was “here for the booze”. Others on the street were less sentimental. By Saturday afternoon – after Charles and Camilla had been crowned – she said she’d found it all “quite emotional”. They bring a hell of a lot of money to the country and I think we should celebrate it,” she said. Photograph: Sophia Evans/The ObserverĪs a staunch monarchist, Bridges is part of the 67%. Basically, the only thing we really know for certain about emotions is that they are complex.A post box is topped with a knitted King Charles III top in Castle Point. Plus, this adds two additional dimensions (Trnka et al., 2016). For example, one study suggested that mapping emotions on how controllable and useful they are is helpful. However, more recent research has suggested that there may be more than two dimensions required to understand and map emotions. Early researchers believed any emotion could be mapped on this circle. These are two axes: one axis is from high to low energy the other axis is from high to low pleasure. This model suggests that emotions can be mapped in a circle. ![]() Reasons like these led psychologists to develop the Emotion Circumplex Model (Russell, 1980). They don't have specific locations in the brain, they almost always co-occur with each other, and there are many blends of emotions. Here are some disgust-related words:Īlthough the basic theory of emotion makes some sense, others have argued that emotions are not discrete things. There is something that we don't want to be around or experience, and we desire to move away. Here is a list of anger-related emotions:ĭisgust is an avoidance-motivated emotion. When we feel anger we want to approach the object of our anger rather than run away from it. But unlike fear, it is an approach-motivated emotion. Like fear, anger is a high-activation negative emotion. A list of sadness related emotions include:įear is a high-activation, avoidance-motivated negative emotion that we tend to feel in response to threats. Sadness is a low-activation (low-energy) negative emotion that we often feel in response to things like rejection or loss. It may include other positive emotional experiences such as: Enjoyment is thought to be the only basic positive emotion. ![]()
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