My mind expanded it to "I feel discomfort and I feel uneasy," since both work. You can feel nouns and you can feel adjectives, just in a different sense. It sounds weird, because we like to construct our logic with parallelism [1], and in this case we're using different definitions of the word, "feel". This makes pulling "feel" out front in an associative manner less correct.
I feel[a] hunger, and I feel[b] sad. I feel[a or b, but not both] hunger and sad.
[a] transitive verb; a physical sensation, acting on the object (in this case, "hunger")
[b] intransitive verb [2]; an emotional state, described by the adjective (in this case, "uneasy")
I feel[a] hunger, and I feel[b] sad. I feel[a or b, but not both] hunger and sad.
[a] transitive verb; a physical sensation, acting on the object (in this case, "hunger")
[b] intransitive verb [2]; an emotional state, described by the adjective (in this case, "uneasy")
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallelism_(grammar)
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intransitive_verb
EDIT: Clarity. Also, IANAL (I am not a linguist), and generally you don't want to take lingual advice from an engineer, like me.