The Dudgeon-o-Meter: How High Is Your Dudgeon?

The dudgeon-o-meter: communicating at low, medium-low, medium-high, and high dudgeon

I love words, which I suppose is part of why I love writing. Certain words/phrases in particular really float my boat and give me no end of amusement. Earlier this week, I wrote about intending to wait until I was no longer in high dudgeon to send a complaint email (about the rodent infestation on a psych ward I was an inpatient on). It turns out that I’m not the only one who loves that word, so why not do a post about it? I think the world needs a dudgeon-o-meter!

What the heck is dudgeon?

Google gives this definition: “a feeling of offense or deep resentment,” and gives the example phrase “the manager walked out in high dudgeon.” And that’s the thing with dudgeon; it only ever seems to be high.

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, an obsolete definition is a kind of low-quality wood used to make knife handles (Shakespeare used it in MacBeth in this sense). OED also talks about the same sense as in the Google definition: “Indignation, resentment; umbrage. Chiefly in in (a) dudgeon: in a state or fit of indignation or offence; with indignation or offence.” It adds this usage descriptor: “Frequently with adjective, as highgreatdeep, etc. (in later use esp. in high dudgeon).”

According to the Grammarphobia blog, it’s not clear how dudgeon came to mean resentment or why it’s always high. Similarly, the Words Going Wild blog says it’s a mystery, although it suggests some possibilities.

What should you do with it?

When one is in high dudgeon and those irate, offended juices are flowing, it can be oh so very tempting to start spreading that dudgeonry to anyone who happens to be in the way. But while the words you come up with may be accurate, they’re not necessarily the best words to get the job done. I sometimes get irritable as a symptom of my depression, and that can make me wallow in dudgeonry like a pig in mud (that metaphor doesn’t really work as well as I want it to, but that’s okay).

When I was in high dudgeon, I wrote a note to my hospital psychiatrist (which you can see in the post A Dickless Prick: A Letter to My Psychiatrist). I still agree with everything I wrote (including the dickless prick descriptor), and in that case it was fine because the only outcome I was looking for was discharge based on there being nothing therapeutic left about our relationship, but had I been trying to accomplish any other purpose, my complete lack of diplomacy might have bitten me in the ass.

The dudgeon-o-meter

While no one seems to talk about any dudgeon level but high, I think it can be useful to consider a range of emotional levels, which is why I came up with the dudgeon-o-meter. It includes the following levels and suggested communication strategies:

  • High dudgeon: Back the fuck away from your phone, keyboard, or any other communication tool, and stay away for at least 3 days to prevent shooting yourself in the foot/ass/anywhere else
  • Medium-high dudgeon: You’re still passionate, and that’s something you can work with, but you shouldn’t be unleashing it on anyone yet, so go ahead and write a draft email, text, or phone script, but wait 5 days before doing anything with it
  • Medium-low dudgeon: You’re thinking more clearly at this point, so go ahead and revise that script, but give it another 1-2 days to reflect before acting on it
  • Low dudgeon: This is the zone where you can be assertive in an effective way, so go ahead and send that text/email or make that call
  • No dudgeon: I actually think low dudgeon is probably more effective than none at all, because it’s nice to have a bit of oomph and passion.

So there you have it, folks, the official Dudgeon-o-Meter®. How do you manage your own dudgeonry, and at what level do you think you communicate most effectively?

81 thoughts on “The Dudgeon-o-Meter: How High Is Your Dudgeon?”

        1. This is an interesting concept. I can be most effective in getting what I want when I’m really angry. What I want may not always be what I say I want – which is not considered to be an autistic behaviour, but I’m sure there are more autistic people like me.

          However, I always felt kind of guilty about that. Maybe I shouldn’t?

  1. I believe I have been in high dudgeon before and have failed to wait three days before approaching the device. In fact, I believe I have failed to wait three SECONDS.

  2. Words seem to do it for me too. In communication, I am the least effective when I am upset. I do more harm than good at those times. It’s difficult though, and I am learning how to conserve more of my energy more often.

  3. What a post! Entertaining to read, and somehow educational. I love how you can make something out of absolutely nothing! Well done :). I learned a new word today, and I will use it and the dudgeon-o-meter in the near future!

      1. I just looked up umbrage and the archaic meaning is “shade or shadow, especially as cast by trees.” So your instinct is right.

  4. Thank you for creating this- I love it!! I most definitely communicate best when I’m lowest on the scale, what tends to happen can be a different thing- at least in my personal life☹. This is something I could most definitely use 🙂

      1. Oh me too!! It’s funny, I had this happen last weekend- I was triggered by a instagram thing- a psychology clinic posted a remarkably fucked-up irresponsible thing. I wrote a letter- and amazingly, didn’t and it because I knew it didn’t get my message across. Anyway, that in it self was going to be a post. Point is, my letter was rambly and I’m glad I was able to recognise that in my heightened state

  5. For anyone who is a Scrabble enthusiast, dudgeon is a 10 point word. 😉 I, too, am a lover of words, to a geeky level. I enjoyed reading this, and plan to read the other posts you have linked here. I work out my high dudgeon moments in the pool. Water absorbs that energy very well! I also try to take the lesson and leave the suffering behind. Suffering is optional!

  6. Love the dudgeon-o-meter — and that you defined dudgeon because had a sense of its usage but couldn’t have defined it. I also loved your note between no-dudgeon and low-dudgeon because we need to have some passion and oomph!!

    Clearly your love words and gifted with them – much to the benefit of all of us around! Thank you, Ashley!

  7. This Dudgeon-o-Meter is fantastic 😂 I’ve been told I can write emails in a way that’s polite on the surface, but not polite at all in between the lines. Skating between low and medium dudgeonry. (At high dudgeon levels the indignation probably just has me sitting there itching to write two-word roasts, so you’re right, back away…)

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