How to Survive a Pandemic Without Feeling Guilt
“It is complicated. There is no explanation. I did not do anything wrong. But I feel guilty,” Shruti Rao, a US-based children’s author laments over a phone call. As I listen to her, I wonder if there, in fact, is anything that happened over the last year makes any sense. I am writing this article from my living room, where I have been cooped in, since the pandemic struck. I am terrified at continuing to do so, for a considerable amount of time in 2021. With overwhelming remorse, indignity, and fear about the coming days.
Excepting defeat: How not to be a sore loser like Donald Trump!
With Donald Trump appearing a sore loser in the latest elections, experts suggest ways to deal with them in a mature way
The US presidential elections saw Donald Trump react to the results in a bad way, with most calling him a sore loser. With this backdrop, it is vital to understand such people and deal with them wisely.
The definition
Dr Prerna Kohli, a Clinical Psychologist and founder of MindTribe.in, describes a sore loser not taking defeat kindly, and gets easily upset about defeat. Poddar feels they worry about otherâs perception of their win or failure. âDiscrediting the winner is one of the most prominent traits. Bringing down others makes them feel better. Instead of facing loss like a champ, sore losers resort to blame game offloading the reason of losing to other people.â