11 Painful Emotions You’ve Only Experienced If You’re Someone Who Feels Everything Too Deeply

feeling everything too deeply, woman feeling her emotions, feels
Yaroslav Blokhin

1. Mauerbauertraurigkeit

The unconscious, unexplained desire to suddenly want to isolate, to push the people around you away, to be alone. Perhaps you’re simply exhausted of social interaction, or perhaps you’re craving a minute to yourself because within the walls of your own mind, you know you’re speaking with honesty, rather than counterfeit words.

2. Anchorage

The longing to grasp a moment between your fingertips, to hold onto the sentences, the words, the memories and keep them with you. The desire to make time stand still and let your worries fade away rather than have them cycle endlessly through your head.

3. Jouska

When you play out an entire conversation in your mind, be it a confrontation, an argument, or a moment that goes terribly wrong, only allowing yourself to fall into inner panic as you fight frustratingly against the bickering in your brain.

4. Moriturism

Being suddenly reminded of the cold, bitter fact that one day you will no longer occupy this earth. That one day your bones will cease to move your body, your cells and organs and wisdom will deteriorate, and you will be but a memory. Coming to the sudden realization that every moment you’ve encountered or created is final in the sense that you cannot rewind and live it again, but merely see it fade behind you along with a reel of thousands of other memories, building the filmstrip of your life.

5. Moledro

A bittersweet feeling of connection to an author, artist, or creator you’ve never met, and will never meet because he or she passed away many years ago. Feeling comforted by the ties you feel between the two of you, but also heartbroken that you’ll never get to experience them face-to-face. All you have is their words, their photos, their paintings, their legacy left behind.

6. Apomakrysmenophobia

The sudden fear that the relationships you have with the people around you lack depth. Although it seems that you can talk about heartfelt matters with the ones you love, you’re suddenly scared that perhaps when the most painful or ecstatic moments of your life occur, you will find that these connections are shallow and guarded.

7. Aimonomia

Being scared to learn the ‘why’ of something, to discover the background, the origin, the creation, or the truth of what you’ve experienced simply for fear of ruining the natural beauty of the moment.

8. Kairosclerosis

Realizing that right now, you are happy. And trying to desperately keep that warm feeling in your chest while simultaneously destroying it by overthinking and analyzing why you’re happy, when the last time you felt this happy was, and how long you think you’ll be happy.

9. Ellipsism

A deep pain that stems from realizing you will never see how the future plays out. That your life will simply end while the world continues on without you, never knowing whether your dreams make it to fruition or the legacy you’ve passed on is revealed through the next generations.

10. Nementia

Feeling anxious, nervous, worried, or strange in your own skin and retracing these feelings back through time, trying desperately to understand their origin or why you feel this way, even when it seems there’s real explanation.

11. Rubatosis

The awareness of your heartbeat—both magical and terrifying—as you realize this is the drum beat to your existence, whether wild or dull or steady or foreign. An ever-present reminder that you are here. Thought Catalog Logo Mark


Author Disclaimer: Emotion explanations are modified and transcribed from John Koenig’s Dictionary Of Obscure Sorrows. All definitions on this page are my own.


Marisa Donnelly is a poet and author of the book, Somewhere on a Highway, available here.

Marisa is a writer, poet, & editor. She is the author of Somewhere On A Highway, a poetry collection on self-discovery, growth, love, loss and the challenges of becoming.

Keep up with Marisa on Instagram, Twitter, Amazon and marisadonnelly.com

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