Sex. Never thought of it any other way. Usually abusive. Def painful. Also dominating (him), submissive (me). And always...just sex.
One sided. Always. A doormat (me).
Disfuctional. Abandoning. Will be abandoned.
Insanity.
Those are the words that came to me for each. I suppose each needs to be redefined some how?
Yep. Because sex is sex, Abuse is abuse, being a doormat is being a doormat, disfunctional is disfunctional, abandonment is abandonment, and insanity is insane.
Attaching the other words? Might as well attach Jeep, watermelons, the straight of Hormuz, the sum of the hypotenuse, a monocle... or various members of the weasel family, or flavors of ice cream... because they’d be as accurate. Sex isn’t rape, being abused isn’t love, used isn’t friendship, etc. You were taught words to use to describe things to protect your abusers. Not because they are the actual definitions.
Something you might consider, is ditching the English words, with the wrong definitions, all together.
Florida has enough Creole & Latin influences you could actually
use the French or Spanish equivalents and be understood by most people. But you could also use Swahili or ASL, if you wanted to create more of a difference in your mind. The biggest point would be NOT to attach the English word (with the wrong definition) to the Other Word. Instead, come to know the Other Word as a concept in and of itself. As if it’s a brand new thing.
Like a kangaroo or a platypus were whole new things. Trying to describe them as things Europeans were already familiar with? :hilarious::roflmao: Some very funny images come to mind. Giant bouncing 2 legged cats as big as greyhounds chasing HUGE mice bigger than horses? What? Mice bigger than cats? Both bigger than dogs??? Bouncing CATS? What next? Beaver-duck-fish? Yeah. By trying to use old words, all they created was confusion. But that was all they had, until people came to understand what a marsupial was, and a kangaroo is. Little wallabies & giant reds, not bouncing cats and huge mice.
People had to see the thing itself, and come to know it as it was, to actually wrap their minds around it. Same thing with these new words. Learn them as themselves. Not as what you were taught were synonyms for abuse, pain, fear, craziness, etc.