I am the authority on what I meant and my intentions.
This is why I gave the example of the dog/cat/sprained ankle conversation. If I tell you I'm struggling to walk my dog because I sprained my ankle, and you go, "Why? I took care of my cats just fine when I sprained my ankle," Like clearly we're not on the same page.
If I say, "Oh, well you see I have a dog, and they need to be walked. And walking is hard with a sprained ankle..." it doesn't make sense for them to go "I understood you just fine. Clearly you're just making excuses for why you can't care for your pet!"
And I'm over here confused as to what just happened and why the conversation just took a turn like that. So I try to fix the miscommunication again, but so often the other person just insists they understood me just fine and I'm just being "defensive" because I "don't like" what they had to say, and if I just "dropped my ego" I would see that it's good advice...
And it might have been good advice that I would take... Except for I have a dog and not a cat.
Like there are just some indicators in a conversation that people pick up on when the other participant misunderstood what was said, or misinterpreted intent. These misunderstandings are often amplified over textual conversations because tone of voice and body language are removed.
So it's not that you're not allowed to have your feelings about whatever is said, no matter how you happen to perceive it. It's just that there was a miscommunication... and lots of people here are not interested in fixing miscommunication when it happens. I'm finding out that there's literally nothing I can do about it, and once someone demonstrates they're not interested in fixing the miscommunication, well, I'm inclined to say "I'm sorry that's how you perceived it," or "I'm sorry you feel that way." Because I do genuinely wish they had understood and felt better than they do as a consequence of the misunderstanding. I have sympathy for them, but I have no recourse.
In the context of this thread, I perceived Forever coming at me super aggressively with the insistence that I don't understand my husband's pain and I'm not willing to sit with him in it. I told her that's not true of me, nor my situation (and like, obviously I would know, right? Because I have privileged insight to my own thoughts, emotions, and life, and she is an outsider looking at it from this website... And I literally went and ask the person to whom it matters most whether he thought I understood his pain, just as confirmation that I'm not missing something, and he said yes. So it really can't be argued that I don't get it...)
So I wondered, why is she doing that? This interaction doesn't make sense, so what am I missing here? So I started looking for context, starting with who she is and what she might be experiencing right now. I remembered what she wrote a few days ago, and the feelings she expressed. I looked at other posts of hers for additional data. I hypothesized that after all this time, she's still making herself "sit in the fire," and hasn't given herself compassion and grace, nor seemed to be recognizing all the work she did to become a better person and a safe partner. (That's why I brought up her authorship of the pinned article, "The Work." Like she is a guru on the subject) I wondered if she was clinging to the shame as a form of self-punishment to keep herself from committing infidelity ever again, as she recommended I do in an earlier post. But you don't need to rely on shame as a safety net when you've done the work, right? Which is what I was trying to convey to her. Like I said, I was trying to understand her as a person.
But it just got interpreted as a defense mechanism and me "digging through her history for ammunition" and "weaponizing her shared feelings" to "undermine her point," which didn't apply to me regardless of my intention. And I know for a fact that that's not what I was doing. Like at all. It's honestly perplexing to me. I keep trying to tell you guys that you got me wrong, and suggest that maybe you're predisposed to hear things that a "typical wayward" would say, rather than what it is I'm actually telling you, and you give me all sorts of negative attributes just for trying to fix the misunderstanding. It's the same thing that happened in the past, and I expect it will be the same in the future. I've just accepted it and I'm trying to control my responses to it, because that's the only thing I can control. I'm not going to apologize for that.
Fuck I just did it again, didn't I? When will I learn that this isn't working
[This message edited by GotTheMorbs at 10:20 PM, Monday, May 25th]