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I find it morally repugnant to relativize abusive behavior (the ex taking advantage of BJ, dumping him under somewhat false pretenses, and then retaliating in a disproportionate manner after BJ already acknowledged his actions,) and to ask supporters to take some of the blame for that erratic behavior. It's one of the reasons people stay in abusive relationships: the blame-shifting they experience from their abusers. Read, "the only reason I'm treating you like this is because YOU did XYZ. If you complain about this treatment YOU are not taking responsibility for YOUR mistakes."I find it morally repugnant to feed into blaming the supporter.
But this isn't what happened here. Nobody on this forum ever told BJ that he did nothing wrong (he gets it,) that he doesn't have to apologize (he has,) or that his ex not wanting to play anymore makes him a horrible person (whole threads have been dedicated to explaining to BJ why someone with PTSD would react as the ex did.)It doesn’t do anyone any good, IMO, to be encouraging the kid who accidentally fell and hurt the other kid “It doesn’t matter if he doesn’t want to play with you, it wasn’t your fault, so you don’t have to apologize, & he has to play with you... or he’s a terrible person.”
abusive behavior (the ex taking advantage of BJ, dumping him under somewhat false pretenses, and then retaliating in a disproportionate manner after BJ already acknowledged his actions
'm not sure the break up was anything more than a break up (I would be pretty damn cranky if my partner spoke to my workmates about my mental health without my permission or knowledge) and the retaliatio
Thank you for pointing this out, anonymous. I actually completely agree with you. The last thing I want to do is minimize domestic violence, so I apologize that that is exactly what I've gone and done here. Though I don't believe that domestic violence is limited to physical or sexual abuse, this is not that--or at least none of us know enough about the situation to make that call. I'm sorry if my "worst case" scenario brain caused any harm or frustration here.I think labelling what seems to me to be a pretty run of the mill relationship gone bad for various reasons without either party being a monster as abuse minimises domestic violence.
Thank you for pointing this out, anonymous. I actually completely agree with you. The last thing I want t...
That’s a really high bar. Unless someone is married to me, and has promised “until death do we part” - I assume genuine friends and partners may make the choice to leave, even if we have been together for years. I don’t condition my longer relationships on life long commitment - unless that specific spoken commitment has been made.If a person can walk away from not only a relationship, but also a friendship of several years, then they were never my friend to begin with.
He didn't confide in a friend. As I understand it, he spoke to his partner's work supervisor.
Okay, I think we all just have very different reads on what happened (I mean, it's the internet, what do any of us know really, no? :) ) From what I understood the OP confided in a person who was primarily a friend, but also a work colleague of the sufferer. My interpretation was such that the conversation took place for the OP to find some support as well as provide information that could help the work colleague understand the sufferer's behavior. (For all I know, this person was considering letting the sufferer go before the OP explained what was going on.) Either way, I didn't take away that the OP talked to the sufferer's boss, a complete stranger, to stir some drama.Confiding in a friend is completely different from “confiding” in an employer.
I agree with thisI don’t consider a whole relationship to not have been a real friendship at any point in time just because it ended.
Okay, I think we all just have very different reads on what happened (I mean, it's the internet, what do any of us know really, no? :) ) From what I understood the OP confided in a person who was primarily a friend, but also a work colleague of the sufferer. My interpretation was such that the conversation took place for the OP to find some support as well as provide information that could help the work colleague understand the sufferer's behavior. (For all I know, this person was considering letting the sufferer go before the OP explained what was going on.) Either way, I didn't take away that the OP talked to the sufferer's boss, a complete stranger, to stir some drama.
I agree with this
Thank you so very much @Hojay for who you are.BINGO! I was actually (without knowing any better) trying to save the bastard from potentially losing his...