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I have been curious about why I take offense sometimes at the actions of others and so I've been doing a little research. This quote below really struck home for me and I thought I would share.

quote:
So why do people insist that they feel offended? It’s surely because, if you recognise that taking offence is an active demand you might have to take responsibility for it. Whereas, if you can pull off the trick of persuading yourself and others that you are the helpless victim of an offence that has been gratuitously done to you, then you will seem to have no choice in what you say and do in response. To have no choice, to be able deliciously to conceal from ourselves the choices we have always made and to give them the force of fatality, is our deepest and saddest craving.



Hadn't thought it was related to power but that makes sense:

quote:
Rarely has it been thought that the way to show you deserve to be the most powerful person on earth is to demonstrate you're also the touchiest.


quote:
feeling affronted has global implications: Islamic organizations and countries seek to ban speech anywhere they decide is insulting to Islam, asserting that a perceived insult can justify a deadly response.
Study the topic of "taking offense" and you realize people are like tuning forks, ready to vibrate with indignation. So why do humans seem equipped with a thrumming tabulator, incessantly calculating whether we are getting proper due and deference?


(I almost deleted the section re: Islamic organizations because I was afraid it would be offensive to some but I like the point it's making about the global implications and how far and how dangerous being offended can be taken.

I found the 10 steps below extremely helpful:


"Are you “too big to take offense”? Or are you easily offended? Do you have thick skin? Or is yours paper-thin? Are you calm and subdued? Or do you easily explode into fits of anger? Do you take things the wrong way? Do you know the “real” motive behind what people say and do and mean, despite their protests to the contrary? Do others believe they have to “walk on eggshells” around you?

If so, your hypersensitivity is robbing you of happiness.

I know it’s much easier for me to tell you to stop taking things so personally, than it is to actually stop taking things so personally. Still, there are ways to thicken your skin and enjoy more joy.

10 Ways of Becoming “too Big to Take Offense”
#1: Talk Yourself out of Being Offended
It can be just that simple. In the heat of the moment, try asking yourself these questions: “What am I getting so bent out of shape for? Does this really matter? What’s the big deal?” Reason with yourself: “Did he really mean it the way I was just about to take it? Is he truly actually trying to hurt me? Well, then, what is he really trying to say?”

Tell yourself the person who is the potential offender has as much right to his opinion as you do to yours. Besides, they’re only words. What can words do? They certainly can’t break my bones!

Remember, the reason we usually feel offended is because of the meaning we attach to what is said or done: “That means he really doesn’t care!” “She’s saying I am no good!” “I knew he didn’t really love me!” “She wouldn’t say that if she was …” And so the internal interpretation goes.

So simply reframe it. Talk yourself out of the offense by telling yourself: “This person is simply expressing his opinion, and listen to how interesting it is! I find it so fascinating that someone can have such opinions that are almost the exact opposite of mine!”

You will be happier as you learn to talk yourself out of offense and internalize the sticks-and-stones-may-break-my-bones-but-words-will-never-hurt-me philosophy of communication.

#2: Put Yourself in the “Offender’s” Shoes
This will have the added benefit of being less offensive to others, as you learn to be “too noble to give offense.” In any event, if you can slide your feet into their moccasins for a minute, you can learn to see things from the offender’s perspective. And then, just maybe, you will see that you too played a role in the drama. And perhaps you will also come to see that the offender had no such intentions of offending.

#3: Assume a Benevolent Motive
Unless proven otherwise (you don’t want to become someone’s dupe), assume the person in question has noble intent. Maybe the language was clumsy, maybe even ill-advised, but assume a good heart. That should take the sting out of the bite and put some happiness back in your day.

So don’t hold on to the words people use to get at the thing they are trying to express. Hear the idea and ignore the clumsiness of the expression.

#4: Practice Detachment
Many people are easily offended because they can’t emotionally differentiate between their thoughts and their inner sense of self. When identities are too closely tied to one’s opinions, and those opinions are then disagreed with, many feel like they, themselves, have been rejected, the core of who they are have been shoved away, pushed to a corner and crushed. This, of course, hurts, but is highly inaccurate.

To overcome hypersensitivity, realize that your opinions are not you. And certainly, any given opinion or set of opinions are not the whole of who you are. To the degree you can detach your ideas from your identity, you will live a happy, fulfilling life with little opportunity to feel offended.

#5: Learn Humility
A well-known religious leader once said that whenever he hears that he has offended someone, his first response is to stop and think if, in fact, he may have said or done something that could have given the impression of an offense. That, by itself, is a great attitude of humility that would make him almost immune to offense.

But he didn’t stop there. He went on to say that he often found that he had indeed said something that could have been construed as offensive. He would then seek out the offended person and apologize for the misconstrued word or deed. Humility is the friend of inner peace and equanimity. And peace and equanimity are the friends of happiness.

#6: Love Truth more than Being Right
If the truth, whoever possesses it, is more valued than the perception that you are the one who knew it first, then opposition to your thoughts and beliefs will be inoffensive no matter how offensive the other person is trying to be. You are not emotionally attached to your position. You only hunger after truth. So opposition to your point of view offers no grounds for offense. You simply want to know the truth, even if you are never the place it originates.

#7: Overcome Self-Centeredness
The It’s-All-About-Me mentality is fertile soil for being frequently offended. Every word out of every mouth, every action or inaction, all that is done or undone, all motives and intentions become a reflection on you. That is a HUGE burden to carry.

If everything is reduced to how it affects you, if you reside at the center of everything, no wonder you are so frequently offended! Move away from the center of everyone else’s life. You likely aren’t really there anyway. Nor should you be, in most cases. Allow most of life to be indifferent to you. My bad mood isn’t about you. Your mom’s neglect isn’t even about you either. It’s about her! This way, less in life will offend you and happiness will be much less fleeting too.

Besides, they’re entitled to their opinion. So let them have it … cheerfully!

#8: Reserve Judgment
Finish the discussion. Let the talk continue to its natural end. So often we jump to conclusions, assume an ill intent, create meaning to a word that then hurts and offends. Resist that urge and delay judgment until the conversation has run its course. You just may find there is no offense to be had by the time you get to the end.

#9: Accept Imperfection
If you expect others to act and speak a certain way, or assume others will be as kind or compassionate as you, if you’re offended when they don’t rise to the level of your expectation, you will almost always be offended or on the verge of it. Instead, allow people to be human. They are, after all.

We all have foibles, idiosyncrasies and personality and character flaws. So do you! Yours just may be different than theirs. So just let it be, shrug and let it slide off your back. Don’t hold on to the imperfections of others so tightly that you strangle yourself in the process! Release! Let go! Breathe. Relax.

Part of accepting others’ imperfections is also learning to forgive them their past mistakes (so the current problem isn’t blown out of proportion as an extension of a previous problem unresolved) and create a sort of Forgiveness Default Setting in your heart that you automatically go to when confronted with offensive language or behavior.

Remember, people are imperfect. You are imperfect. Life is imperfect. And that’s just plain A-Okay! When you can accept their imperfection (and your own!), you will be well on your way to a life of more emotional stability and happiness.

#10: Accept Yourself
Learn and grow and improve, of course. But accept where you are along that path. You could hardly be anywhere else, given circumstances, after all. So accept yourself deep inside. Validate your inner being. See yourself as more than your behavior. You are also your potential.

You are of God, after all. None of us live up to expectations. But accept that too, not as an excuse to stop the moral climb, but as an understanding that where you are is fine for now, at this moment. Move from there, but right now, here, you are complete.

This self-acceptance will de-claw others’ ability to offend you. It won’t hurt because your validation doesn’t come from their opinions about you. It comes from within … or from above. People who are internally fragile – no matter how “tough” their exterior – break most easily at the wrong or misplaced word or deed.

So grow your inner self. Become self-accepting. And life will be a more consistently happy place to live."
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Hi Liese,

I found this really interesting! Thank you for sharing. Where did you find this? (if you're okay sharing).

I dont' find myself offended often, but like most people I certainly get there at times where I'm holding on to something. I've done that before with my T in particular so reading about this was able to help me retroactively look at how I was testing her/our relationship with some things. Mostly to do with protecting myself and my assumptions about how other people will probably treat me badly because my parents did (example 3, 8, 9).

This is also a good message on how to relate more openly. Just in speaking about my relationship with T since I have worked at not being as touchy with her (and as unaccepting of her imperfections or mistake), it has improved our relationship so much for me to assume her intent is toward love and kindness rather than to hurt or manipulate.

When I do things that are listed here the image I hold of her and our relationship is a lot stronger. Before, we'd have relational failures just about every 2-3 sessions because of my fear now they are farther and fewer between and the issues have a lot less to do with feeling offended and a lot more to do with working to understand meaning and not push her away (I feel like being offended was a way to push her away... for me to be angry so I didn't have to be close).

Anyway, I know this isn't just about therapy but I could really apply it to my T relationship!
Hi Cat,

I'm sorry it has taken me so long to reply. I have been flat on my back for 4 days with a nasty stomach virus and haven't been able to lift my head off the pillow (except to run to the bathroom). I'm finally out of the woods and able to sit upright.

When I started to look at this stuff, it was mainly in reference to how often I got offended by my mother. It could be, on the one hand, that my mother is an offensive woman - as my T says. But on the other, why such a strong reaction from me? As I'm learning to validate myself, I still see her the same way but "I" am less involved in what it means for me when she says what she says and I'm able to stand back a little more and be objective.

I love that you related it to your therapist. I hadn't thought of that. But now that you mention it, I used to get offended by my T all the time. I used to think he was trying to humiliate me. Well, we all know that he was a bit unenlightened about this trauma and attachment stuff. But his intentions weren't bad and they certainly weren't to humiliate me. I guess as I've gained a stronger sense of self and of being good, I might feel a bit stung but I don't feel the same sense of humiliation.

Glad you liked the info. I really like the 10 steps too. I do get confused about being "too big to take offense" and standing up for myself. I'm going to have to do a lot of work in that area. Frowner Any thoughts on how to differentiate?
There were some good points in this excerpt, but some I had to take with a grain of salt.

In the case of expressing an opinion, for example, whether or not Fox News presents unbiased truth, yes, I would agree with all the points listed above. But people that DO say offensive things, as opposed to expressing an opinion, (for the flip side read Verbal Abuse by Patricia Evans) do so because they cannot differentiate between the real, separate person they are interacting with and their "dream person"/projection.

I find it more useful to simply say "Can you please repeat that?" or "what did you mean by that?"

Also, keep in mind, that a person who tries to define another person, tell them what their motives are, what to think, or what to feel, is participating in a fundamental invasion of boundaries. (verbal abuse) Many therapists have wounded egos and will unconsciously engage in this behavior. (Fortunately I have talked to another T who recognizes this)

Just because a person feels like they are saying something for someone else's "own good" doesn't mean that they are speaking the "Truth" ..nor does the other person need to listen. The reason for this is that there are many unaware people in the world who make a daily habit of projecting their own stuff onto others. Simply allowing this behavior to repeat has not worked for me in the past, but yes, knowing when to let something slide (which I do a lot) and when to say "enough" ON THE SPOT, IN THE PRESENT MOMENT is a good skill to have. Does the book address this?

Everyone is allowed to have an opinion, but if it is unsolicited or someone trying to impose their own "truth" on me, I will kindly, from this point on, give it back. "What did you say?" This gives the unaware person an opportunity to clarify their communication, if it was knee-jerk, unaware, or sloppy. If they persist, I say: "Really? That seems to be about YOU, not me, I don't want your commentary, you can have it back". Have a nice day.

Having said that, I don't waste my time interacting where these unaware types generally hang out.. FB rants are a good example. But in real life, often it is entirely appropriate to say NO, or call someone out on their words, in an appropriate manner.

This works both ways.. as a result, I have vowed to become more responsible for what comes out of my own mouth. Am I defining others? Invading a boundary? Telling others what they should think or feel, or what their motives are? If I do, and I am called on it, I will take responsibility for it.

A person's word IS important. I'm not a big fan of the general trend of avoiding responsibility for one's word, and putting it entirely on the other.

And thanks for providing a different perspective for me, as well.

PS: BTW it is a classic abuse pattern to drop a bomb on someone (say something you KNOW is offensive) followed by the phrase "you are too sensitive" if a protest is given. From my own personal experience, letting behavior slide like this has given the other person permission to continue the abuse. When I call someone on it, "What did you just say?" I am treated with more respect, not less.

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