adjective:
1. Beset or overwhelmed with woe; immersed in grief or sorrow; woeful.
2. Being in a sorry condition; dismal-looking; dilapidated; run-down.
Socrates, condemned to death by the people of Athens, prepares to drink a cup of hemlock, surrounded by woebegone friends.
– Alain De Botton, The Consolations of Philosophy
Woebegone is from Middle English wo begon, from wo (from Old English wa, used to express grief) + begon, past participle of begon, “to go about, to beset,” from Old English began, bigan, from bi-, “around, about” + gan, “to go.”
This word reminds me of this book which I have not read. From the title, sounds depressing. I know, it’s a radio show! Whatever.
I’m grumpy today and feeling woebegone because….well, a variety of things. Here’s one thing:
My BABY lost her first tooth. I was not prepared for my emotional reaction.
I almost cried. WTH? A tooth. A teeny weeny baby tooth. That, IMO, has no business being out of that flappin’ little mouth. Truly, a lazy tooth shirking its responsibilities. I am sure it had many more months, maybe years, of chewing that it was lined up for.
And THIS, two weeks before she goes off to full day kindergarten? What I am going to be like on THAT DAY?
You don’t want to know. I don’t want to know.
All I feel like doing now is going around woeing…sighsighsigh.
Are you having woebegone days?
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