Let us break up the words shall we? Writhing means to contort or twist your body. It does not mean that you have to be on the floor to do this, you can be standing or sitting. It can mean rocking backwards and forwards.
Anguish means to feel distressed in body or in your mind, and pain can be felt in the mind as well as in the body. I believe that what you are asking involves a deep feeling of remorse or sorrow, so one rocks backwards and forwards in a distressed and painful feeling in the mind and not a painful feeling in the body. It is a state of mind rather than a physical state. A state one would get in if a loved member of the family dies.
You cry in pain because of a physical hurt You cry in anguish because of an emotional pain.
Twisting; squirming; contorting. Common sentence: he was writhing in pain.
Writhing movements are convoulsons of the body due to pain or other circumstances
Writhing
Anguish is both a noun and a verb. If anguish is being used as a noun, it would mean 'great suffering, distress, or pain.' If used as a verb, it would mean 'to be deeply tormented by pain or sorrow.'Example for noun: Survivors of a natural disaster often suffer great mental anguish long after their terrible ordeal is over.Example for verb: The child's disapearance anguished every member of the community.Hope this helps!
Anguishment is another word for anguish, extreme pain or distress of body or mind.
to feel and suffer in pain
The phrases "rapturous pain" and "divinest anguish" suggest an intense and almost euphoric experience of suffering or emotional turmoil. They convey the idea that these forms of pain or anguish are so profound and overwhelming that they border on the sublime or transcendental.
One answer:"Anguish" is: "extreme pain, distress or anxiety."Among the disputed definitions of "spirit"... one might be: "attitude or feelings."In which case, a "spirit of anguish" would be "a feeling of extreme pain, distress or anxiety."
Yes. And I am also on the ground right now writhing in pain.
Violent contest or striving., Pain so extreme as to cause writhing or contortions of the body, similar to those made in the athletic contests in Greece; and hence, extreme pain of mind or body; anguish; paroxysm of grief; specifically, the sufferings of Christ in the garden of Gethsemane., Paroxysm of joy; keen emotion., The last struggle of life; death struggle.
Agony