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- #61
No, I think that would be terrible. One of the valuable things about his forum is that we approach situations and issues from a different angle. To paraphrase someone on another thread - If a poster says I need a hammer for this problem, they might get three hammers, but also a screwdriver, and someone who dislikes DIY tools.What I'm hearing here, and correct me if I'm wrong... Is that you're looking for some kind of consensus on what people should say, & how they say it?
a new member is just finding their feet, maybe need to get beyond the aggressive barrier installed when coming to this very place for help and support,
There's an emphasis here on being very direct that I have found confrontational more than once.
Yes, I recognise in myself that at the same time I ask for help I put up a barrier to ensure no-one gets close enough to offer that help. If that barrier is in the form of stroppiness or aggression it's all to easy for the recipient to respond from the same place. If they perceive our directness as confrontational, then it's likely that will respond in the same way.
we are not therapists, but we can model best practice, sometimes a few words in chat can direct someone to feel at ease and copy what other members are doing, until they settle in. Saying to people the mods here are great they will send you warnings if you break the rules, so be grateful for that, not reactive, as that takes precious time and energy. Some people get it, some don't.
These are the two posts I shall take practical application from. I'm aware that I don't do much in the way of responding to mew people, or to many posts for that matter because I'm afraid of saying the wrong thing. And I never use chat and barely PM because both frankly terrify me. Maybe I need to get to grips with them. Any tips?was actually counseled by a few members when the incident occurred and they offered to follow me. I have tried to do the same if new members seem to have a hard time adjusting. I wonder, @stenni, if this would be something that you could do to 'help' if your heart is being tugged.
I have serious doubts as to if and when I'd reveal my deepest and darkest here. And it's not for lack of seeking & wanting real time help for it. I have shyness, I wonder how my past will be received, I have trust issues, & there's times when I myself don't wanna go there.
I think this is a common experience for any of us. It depends partly on the stage we are at in our journey, partly on the way our attempts to tell or ask for help have been responded to in the past, and partly on the sort of people we are. I rarely even name my traumas to myself, let alone anyone else, and when I do tend to think of them by their labels, not by the details. I've had some really bad responses from professionals, which left me battered and defensive. I suspect that if I'd come here after only those experiences, I would have been very closed and revealed virtually nothing. As it was, i used to post, log out in panic and run.I figure it would be a given; considering the symptoms of what we're dealing with here; that perhaps it's not just about managing to tell...it's about establishing trust over time, in which to tell.
And that is why I think toll is the wrong word. I'm surprised no-one has used "Borderline-ish" either. I think volatile may be nearer - or emotional sensitivity, reactive anger and poor coping responses. I think the disruptive new members I'm think of didn't come here to create drama, they came to look for help.The way it explained to me, was to think of it less like a troll (mythical Scandinavian creature). But more as a trawling simillarly to a fishing boat. The fisherman (troll). Casts out their net (Inflamitory statement or question). Then slowly moves around waiting for the fish to get caught up in the net (drama).