Lady Butterfly @lazysoci.al to Mental Health@lemmy.worldEnglish · 11 天前This is very true...lazysoci.alimagemessage-square38fedilinkarrow-up1460arrow-down115file-text
arrow-up1445arrow-down1imageThis is very true...lazysoci.alLady Butterfly @lazysoci.al to Mental Health@lemmy.worldEnglish · 11 天前message-square38fedilinkfile-text
It’s often hard for neurotypical people to understand this, which I get. But it really can be traumatic
minus-squareleisesprecher@feddit.orglinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up3arrow-down15·10 天前Of course there is. As I wrote above: if everything is a trauma, nothing is. You can’t just expand the meaning of a well defined word just because you like the vibe of it applying to the victim group of the day.
minus-squareSenal@slrpnk.netlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up5arrow-down1·10 天前In the same way you can’t apply narrow definition for a word to all situations, when other more contextually correct definitions exist ? (I mean, you can, but you probably shouldn’t) You can’t just expand the meaning of a well defined word just because you like the vibe of it applying to the victim group of the day. Also that is literally how languages change over time, so…yes, you can. Though having a narrow definition of what a language can and can’t be does track with your general vibe so far…
minus-squareNay@feddit.nllinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up3arrow-down1·9 天前This is a general reply to most of your replies in this post… Everything isn’t trauma. Trauma is relative. You keep minimizing things, saying stuff like “One joke” or “A bruise.” You are disregarding the context of repetition and time. Imagine getting 15 quarter size bruises a day over the course of several years. Is that not trauma? I don’t know why this is such a pain-point for you, but a little empathy would probably help.
Of course there is. As I wrote above: if everything is a trauma, nothing is.
You can’t just expand the meaning of a well defined word just because you like the vibe of it applying to the victim group of the day.
In the same way you can’t apply narrow definition for a word to all situations, when other more contextually correct definitions exist ?
(I mean, you can, but you probably shouldn’t)
Also that is literally how languages change over time, so…yes, you can.
Though having a narrow definition of what a language can and can’t be does track with your general vibe so far…
This is a general reply to most of your replies in this post…
Everything isn’t trauma. Trauma is relative.
You keep minimizing things, saying stuff like “One joke” or “A bruise.”
You are disregarding the context of repetition and time.
Imagine getting 15 quarter size bruises a day over the course of several years. Is that not trauma?
I don’t know why this is such a pain-point for you, but a little empathy would probably help.