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<p style="color:#333333;font-weight:normal;font-size:16px;line-height:30px;font-family:Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif;hyphens:auto;text-align:justify;" data-flag="normal">Watching a kitten <b>fumbling</b> around , it might feel as if you’ve never encountered anything so devastatingly adorable in your <b>mortal</b> live . But you may also feel the conflicting <b>urge</b> to squeeze or smush the kitten . This urge which phycologists call cute aggression ,is a surprisingly common one<b> estimate to affect </b>about a half of all adults . Cut aggression is importantly not link to the actual intention to do harm, instead it seems to result from emotional overload . Some scientist think the cute things (<b>elicited</b>) such positive emotions from certain people ,that the experiences becomes overwhelming . T<b>hey hypothesize that sightly aggressive discordant thoughts ,are the brain’s way of putting the brake on</b>, and re...