slightlyaggressiveaffirmations:
PHYSICAL, SEXUAL, ROMANTIC, VERBAL OR ANYTHING ELSE, IF YOU HAVE BOUNDARIES, THAT DAMN WELL DESERVES SOME FUCKING RESPECT!!! SO YES, IT’S 9000% OKAY TO BE ANGRY IF SOMEONE IGNORES THEM!!!
slightlyaggressiveaffirmations:
PHYSICAL, SEXUAL, ROMANTIC, VERBAL OR ANYTHING ELSE, IF YOU HAVE BOUNDARIES, THAT DAMN WELL DESERVES SOME FUCKING RESPECT!!! SO YES, IT’S 9000% OKAY TO BE ANGRY IF SOMEONE IGNORES THEM!!!
what i hope yall mean when you say “protect people with ugly symptoms”: protect/support people who have meltdowns, people who pick at skin, people who are anti social, people who have hallucinations, etc
what some of yall actually mean: protect people who are abusive, manipulative and stalkers. protect people who constantly use their mental illness as a shield to avoid facing consequences for their behavior. support people who are anti recovery and refuse to better themselves.
*deep, anger-tinged, disappointed, BONE-tired sigh*
nope, didn’t know. Have changed the answer. thank you for telling me, Nonnie.
There’s a narrative about abusers that, while rings true for probably a lot of people, falls short in my experience. Not all abusers are calculating and malicious. Some people just. Think abuse is the proper way to interact with human beings. (Can’t get someone to do what I want? Emotionally manipulate them! And then say that they’re the manipulative one!) not all abusers intend to be abusive or even know what they’re doing is abusive.
That doesn’t mean the abuse is any better for the victim. It usually means we question it more. Is it really abuse if they didn’t mean it? If they tell us they love us? If they’re not malicious? If they just don’t know any other way to behave?
Abuse just has many forms and they all suck balls
“but being abused made you so kind!” being abused made me terrified of being anything less than perfectly accommodating and pleasing in an effort to protect myself from the violence my abuser reacted with but okay whatever
Also see “You’re so mean now. I liked you better before.”
You liked me when I was completely accommodating out of residual fear and now I have basic boundaries and a shred of self confidence it inconveniences you.
Cool story.
Also true. Once you stop being a doormat you’re not a survivor, you’re an inconvenience. It’s disgusting.
hey like, if you happen to do something abusive because of your mental illness
you still gotta apologize for it????
you still have to accept responsibility???
you can’t expect the people around you to just suck it up when you hurt them because you’re mentally ill.
spiraling further and self-deprecation/calling urself a monster also isn’t an apology. an apology does not involve another person comforting you for your harmful actions.
same with claiming that you are a failure and are doomed to never change or improve. Apology should not involve the other person comforting you and rooting for you, and essentially being your cheerleader.
Same if you claim that not doing abusive things to someone repeatedly is “so hard” while also refusing to examine your behavior, to create a plan of action to help you cope with your mental illness in a healthy way, or by refusing to seek help in any shape or form. Twice as bad if you expect the person you abused to be your mental health therapist/processor.
Something that a lot of people don’t realize is that abusers are capable of being nice. Yes, abusers can do acts of kindness. These acts of kindness do not mean that they aren’t abusive. They’re still abusers.
If your parents constantly tell you that you’re worthless, but provide you with everything you want, they’re still abusive.
If your boyfriend screams at you whenever you do something he doesn’t like, but cuddles you and calls you beautiful, he’s still abusive.
If your friend threatens to never talk to you again when you try to talk to other people, but is always there for you when you need them, they’re still abusive.
Acts of kindness do not make up for their abuse. This is a method that abusers use to keep you attached to them and make you less likely to leave them. You are not a bad person for leaving someone if they cause constant harm to you. Their kindness does not outweigh the harm and pain they caused you. Their kindness does not justify their abuse. Abusers can do good things for their victims and still be abusers.
Abuse is *never* justifiable.
The idea that abusers are cartoon bad guys who are constantly terrible needs to die. Nobody would form an attachment to an abuser or find it difficult to leave one if they behaved badly all the time.
Follow your gut instincts with this type of thing, even if it’s hard. Even if you doubt yourself and others around you do to. Because there will come a day when you look back and realize that getting yourself far away from that situation was the smartest thing you’ve ever done.
Q: Should I harass or bully someone over who/what they ship?
A: No.
Q: But they ship the wrong ship!
A: Still no.
Q: Their ship will never be canon! It’s so obvious to anyone
reading/watching/playing.A: I don’t care. The answer is still no.
Q: My ship is canon, and they ship one of the couple with
someone else! It’s like cheating! How about now?A: Nope, not now either.
Q: The ship they ship is unhealthy/abusive/incestuous/icky.
I should definitely harass them about that.A: It’s like you’re not even listening to me. No, no you
should not.Q: But if they ship this about fictional characters, they must
support it in real life!A: No, enjoying reading or writing about something is not
the same as supporting it in real life. Agatha Christie is not a mass murderer,
despite having fictionally killed over 100 people.Q: Well, I guess it’s okay if the person shipping it is
doing so to deal with abuse or trauma of their own. But only then! Everyone else is fair game.A: And how, pray tell, do you plan to enforce this arbitrary
rule? You’re planning to compel people
to show their victim bone fides to
you, a complete stranger? So that you can pass judgement on whether their
trauma was “real enough” or if they are “victim enough” to warrant shipping
something you disapprove of? Not only is that absurd, it’s extremely offensive and damaging to the very people you’re purporting to help.
You don’t get to be the arbiter of someone else’s life experiences, period.
Some people use fandom as a coping mechanism, yes, and that is 100% their
business. Some people ship unhealthy/abusive ships for completely benign
reasons, up to and including “because they look pretty together” and that is perfectly valid. You don’t get a
free pass to harass someone in the name of great justice here.Q: Fuck you, I’m going to harass someone anyway. I might
even make a blog about it!A: Well, you’re an asshole then. I hope you step on a lego.
there has been a pretty far-reaching trend on this website to blog about the effects of mental illness and trauma on emotional regulation and an aggressive campaign to get people to not only understand but accept boundary-crossing behavior from people because it is a reflection of their mental illness/trauma, as far as to imply that you are ableist if you are not able to tactfully handle and accept someone else’s dysfunctional coping mechanisms and behavior despite your own discomfort. i see this most often with posts about bpd but there are other topics as well. i haven’t commented on any of it because it’s not a pie i wanted a finger in, but it has over time led me to develop severe discomfort around people who follow that line of thought to the point that i have disengaged, unfollowed, and unfriended many people who agree with it.
the stuff i’m seeing passed around now about “supporting perpretrators” in addition to survivors is the horrifying track down which that train of thought has sped, because what people don’t seem to understand is that mental illness and trauma do no make you an exception to the boundaries of those around you. it is necessary to be aware of the ways that survivors and mentally ill people may lash out emotionally at those they are close to but it is not actually necessary to be “accepting” to the point that it is harmful to you. your emotional boundaries are important, more important than whatever obligation you feel to “accommodate” someone’s trauma.
it is not “okay” that survivors sometimes display manipulative/abusive behaviors towards the people around them and it is important to handle these situations with tact, sure, but not to the detriment of setting your own boundaries and checking the behaviors in question. when friends i know are mentally ill/ trauma survivors have lashed out at me with emotionally manipulation tactics in times of great distress, i have supported them afterward, but i have always followed this up with a discussion about how these kinds of behaviors can not and will not continue or our relationship will end. this is not “ableist” or refusing to support survivors’ trauma, it is setting strong boundaries within the context of supporting each other and providing the community in which we all can heal. what is important here is that these are isolated incidents – learned defense mechanisms arising in times of panic and stress – and not consistent grabs for power. these are not people following the deliberate, overarching pattern of actions abusers use to isolate and control victims, and their actions are easily distinguishable from such.
my point is that this discourse has allowed people to blur the line between these behaviors and abuse when it comes to community support. we should support abusers in our communities as well, they say, because otherwise we would be isolating vulnerable marginalized people who are just struggling with their own trauma. this is exactly what abusers want. this is not a radical attitude. abusers depicting themselves as helpless victims of emotions and circumstances out of their control has pretty much always been the abuser party line. there is nothing productive or useful or valid about carving out community resources for “accountability” in ways that perpetuate bad abuse politics and logics that have been used to silence survivors for years and years. you cannot support survivors and also support their abusers by continuing to welcome them in the same community spaces, period, and it takes some ridiculous mental gymnastics to pretend otherwise.
Hey there, Nonnie – you caught me just before I stumbled off to bed! (IT’S VERY LATE FOR ME). Here’s all I can do, via the internet. I am afraid that I am in Australia, and you are on Anon, but I do consider this question EXTREMELY important. So here’s what I have:
okay, is this teacher harming you, is the biggest question. If so: GO REPORT THEM TO AN ADULT OR ANOTHER TEACHER THAT YOU TRUST. NOW. NOW. DO NOT GO TO THEIR CLASS. GO TO SAFE PEOPLE YOU KNOW AND TRUST, STAY WITH THEM, AND CALL THE POLICE.
Is this teacher a jerk to you, singling you out or treating you scornfully in any way, under-marking and devaluing your work, being demanding towards you, insulting you, or any similar behaviour? If so: GO REPORT THEM TO THE HEAD OF THEIR DEPARTMENT AND TO YOUR YEAR ADVISOR. TALK TO THEM ABOUT THAT TEACHER’S BEHAVIOUR TO YOU, AND HOW IT IS ADVERSELY AFFECTING YOU. COLLECT YOUR RECEIPTS: have instances of their behaviour documented and/or written down, and write down the names of any of your fellow students who can corroborate each story. Be as clear and detailed as possible, even if you are emotional about this. Get your parent(s)/guardian(s) on board if you can, to support you (I know not every student can count on that sort of support, but if you can, it’s a good idea). You should definitely ask for your work to be reevaluated, if that is an issue.
Is this teacher a rubbish teacher who can’t teach? Who can’t give you the information or engagement or learning that you want out of your English classes? If so: READ. READ EVERYTHING. It’s unfair to you to put the responsibility for your learning solely upon your own shoulders, but until you have a competent teacher, reading is the BEST AND MOST ACCESSIBLE THING YOU CAN POSSIBLY DO FOR YOURSELF. I don’t care what it is: doesn’t have to be high literature. It can be a magazine, fanfiction, science or beauty or boating articles, novelisations of movies, poetry, whatever. Read, until you have a new teacher. It sucks, but there are crap teachers out there, and we all have to endure ‘em. I’ve even had crap teachers when studying how to be a teacher, go figure. You will learn more by reading – and enjoying yourself as you read – than you ever learned from enduring the droning of someone who makes you want to stab your eyeballs out with your pen just to relieve the monotony.
(however, if it is just that you either, a) dislike the subject, or b) this teacher has reasonable and appropriate expectations of you both academically and behaviourally, then they are in fact doing their job.)
Nonnie – That’s what I have, I really hope it’s of use to you. *hugs* Look after yourself, this is your education, and you deserve a good one. All my good thoughts and wishes go with you.