Sure. It wouldn't be ok to mimic what happened. Let's say they tell something you told them in confidence to other people. I don't think it's a good idea to do the same to them, unless you cannot continue being friends with them and you want this to be the parting gesture. But to express anger at them, tell them how it made you feel and potentially (but obviously not always) trigger feelings of guilt or shame or hopefully the vastly more useful regret, that's fine. If you merely express how you feel and what you think set off those feelings, I mean, you're doing them a favor.Is it okay to inflict negative feelings on them because they did it to you? Like guilt, judgement and shame. Criticism. Disapproval. — Benj96
If you merely express how you feel and what you think set off those feelings, I mean, you're doing them a favor. — Bylaw
Yes, and there are not easy rules or processes to figure out what is happening. Someone could milk something in such a dynamic. While in another relationship, a perfectly natural response gets labelled being too sensitive (which is how narcissists and other people with toxic patterns gaslight people). Very tricky to sort it all out. And we have all, I would guess, realized later than we wished that we or the other person were the problem and we had fooled ourselves or been fooled to think it was the other way round.I get what you're saying. I was about to point that out before fully reading your text that what causes X harm fro one person may not cause the same X harm for another. And differing beliefs on what is hurtful often is the reason for arguments. Like "oh don't be so sensitive" or "that's a bit overdramatic". — Benj96
LOL. Yeah. You were there ahead of me.People call it gaslighting — Benj96
Yes. And since I brought up narcissists and we do seem to be on the same page about the gnarliness of this, I will mention that narcissists can do both undervalue other people's natural reactions and judge dismiss them, while later getting as much milage out of their own 'victimization'.On the other hand people do put on a show to maximise emotional factor when they're trying to win an argument. They may not actually be offended/ hurt but will cry and say how could you say that? And that's emotional manipulation - the converse side of undervaluing feelings. — Benj96
Yes. Though I think that violence is that last resort interpersonally (unlikely this is controversail). I actually think raw expression of emotion -----> simple verbal expression mainly about feelings ------------> verbal expression with insults/critiicsm implied or explicit --------> violence is the escalation. And one should try to not get ahead of the other person and begin at the low end and if possible leave before the last stage. Some things are hard to unsay. But it is actually fairly easy to get past 'that made me feel like a piece of s____'. Even if the person saying it is overreacting, say. The moment you escalate to 'You are a toxic sadist' or 'I can see why you've never been popular', it is a definite step up in impact and long term effects. I think if you get lots of trust with someone content can be forgotten and thought of as expressive. This is hard to do if the verbal stuff is said analytically and coldly. My wife has said some pretty harsh stuff and I've done some name calling, but this was after a great deal of trust was built. Now I know that for her the extremes of content are really just volume and she never says them calmly or tries to worm them into my mind.But yes, I think actions/behaviours hurt. But words also hurt and can even hurt more than actions. So the phrase "sticks and stones may break my bones but words can never hurt me" is not really true. — Benj96
Like in a work situation. Yes, hard. I struggle with this myself and I err on the side of not confronting people. And I don't mean, that's my philosophy, I mean that's my weakness. I suppose it is my philosophy, but not to the degree I have this as a weakness. Verbal reprimands can of course be tempered with statements in general. I like your work in general, but this area is a real problem. I know you can improve, what do you think? and so on. And one can ask them what they have taken the reprimand to mean. What worries does it bring up? I suppose I am thinking of work relationships where it would best to have this fomalized. To take responsibility for making the context very clear and checking in. That can be a lot to ask an aggrieved person in a personal relationship. But I think informally it will happen between people with a healthy amount of empathy.This is where the concern for verbal reprimand comes in for failing to meet expected actions. Its hard to know when a criticism will land as a mild vocal grievance or a slap to the face/gut punch. — Benj96
I like your work in general, but this area is a real probl — Bylaw
My wife has said some pretty harsh stuff and I've done some name calling, — Bylaw
Those are likely better. (though say that in a condescending tone and it can regain the knife). But I agree it focuses on the action, not the person.For example: instead of saying "Youre an assh*le!" you say "you're behaving like an assh*le would/ you're acting like assh*le". — Benj96
Right subject matter, wrong analysis. When you make known that you're hurt by their actions, you're not bringing them down to whatever sewage you find yourself in. Someone has to call them out for their bad behavior. It's how you do it, not if you do it, that matters. Do it with class and finesse so you don't feel like your hurting them. Say it directly if you're gonna do it to them what they did to you.It doesn't feel right to inflict that on someone, to drag them down to your level of anguish, but it also doesn't feel right ignoring your own needs, invalidating your own feelings as secondary to theirs. — Benj96
Someone has to call them out for their bad behavior. It's how you do it, not if you do it, that matters. Do it with class and finesse so you don't feel like your hurting them. Say it directly if you're gonna do it to them what they did to you.
8d — L'éléphant
Yes, use this principle for people you care about. Others, don't give them the time of day.In essence, if you don't contest the spoiled, how are they to ever recognise their actions as spoiled?
Its a reciprocal" give and take" scenario that keeps everyone in check. — Benj96
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