- My first reaction: Good grief, you people should not be feeling so guilty! Which led me to: hmmm … maybe I shouldn’t either? So I like Ozma’s “compassion” mantra.
- Reading about all these ridiculous things others feel guilty about makes me realize that there are a lot of things I could feel guilty about, but don’t. Daycare, for instance. I know that this is the best choice for us, and I don’t sweat it … so maybe another mantra I can use when I’m feeling guilt-ridden is “It’s no different from daycare!”
- I realize I have a fear that if I’m not feeling guilty, then I’m being a bitch (as Orange brought up). New mantra: “Embrace your inner Bitch.” (Not that feeling guilty is the opposite of being a bitch. But it’s hard to imagine a guilty bitch.) (Though Orange, I think you should feel guilty about misspelling “wracked.”)
- A mantra that is a paraphrase of what Artemis said: “I’ve been wearing guilt like underwear, and it’s time to go commando!”
- Virginia’s mantra (“At least I'm not Bush, At least I'm not Bush”), while certainly true and quite funny, is almost too extreme for the circumstances. Perhaps “At least I’m not Britney”?
- NotMisery’s point that feeling guilty is a choice speaks to me. I’m all about making conscious choices to feel a certain way: I choose to be happy rather than sad (when I’m on the right meds, that is); I choose to be cheerful rather than bitter; I choose to be grateful rather than whiny (usually). I can certainly try choosing to not feel guilty. (I’m having trouble coming up with the opposite of guilty again, though. Innocent? No. Bitchy? Sort of. Well-meaning? Wishy-washy. Peaceful? Eh.)
- I like Ariella’s question, "What does this guilt really MEAN?" I think in some circumstances that could work as a mantra.
- Kungfukitten’s wand-waving and ass-shaking, though not a mantra, is a cheering mental image.
Today I came down with a virus that’s been going around — high fever and a weird rash — but I refuse to believe that this is punishment for my self-centered, guilt-free day. (I am deeply grateful that I was raised as a heathen rather than Catholic or Jewish or Southern Baptist.)
5 comments:
Oh, girl, it's on. Here are a few references supporting the use of the no-W "rack," in phrases like "racked with guilt," "rack my brains," and "nerve-racked." Wrack pertains to wreckage, destruction, and ruin. Rack derives from the stretching rack and connotes torture, pain, and strain. Have you been utterly destroyed by guilt, or merely pained by it? You seem fairly intact to me, so I'll vote for the latter.
You should feel guilty about publicly impugning my spelling and usage skills. Do I tell you how to run your medical practice? (Harrumph.)
Hm. The wrack/rack choice is an interesting one. I can't imagine racking my brains, though. I think the idea there is that you destroy your brain in an attempt to find the thing you're looking for (much like the cops might destroy your apartment looking for your huge stash of superpure cocaine.)
Sounds like a great day, DoctorMama. Congratulations on not feeling guilty about it. My mantra is "a happy mama is a better mama."
orange — I don't know, sounds kind of like one of those crossword-puzzle (var.) spelling things to me. Or maybe you like that spelling because you've got a nice rack?
I think the opposite of "guilt" is "free."
Also, I think guilt is not an adult emotion and therefore I did make a choice a number of years ago not to feel it any more. It was a great choice. It's nice to be free.
Free — I like that.
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