Afterwards, there is the soul-searching, asking hard questions as to why things like that happen at all.
Soul-searching, in short, is a close self examination and analysis after something has gone wrong.
Or, in Chinese parley, it is self criticism.
Searching implies that we may have lost it, and therefore have to relocate it.
For those who still cannot find the right answers and the right courses of action to take after serious soul searching, well, perhaps they have lost their soul entirely.
Fortunately, that is not the case in most cases. Some people may have briefly lost their moral compass, so to speak or have sold their soul to the devil, as it were but I believe nobody loses their soul in its entirety. They just need to do more soul searching.
All right, here are media examples:
1. Less than two months before a fairytale wedding anticipated by much of the world, Britain’s royal family finds itself fighting an inconvenient distraction: revelations that Prince Andrew, the queen’s second son, is friends with a convicted sex offender, was photographed with a teenage prostitute, and has been accused of ties to Moammar Gadhafi’s Libyan regime.
The Duke of York also hosted the son of the Tunisian dictator shortly before a popular uprising drove him from power — and the buildup of embarrassment has sparked calls that he be stripped of his role as special U.K. trade representative.
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