Hmmm I'm not sure we're all talking about the same thing! I thought it was about people who are all about themselves and people who are actively malicious, how to recognise and avoid them.
Exactly where I was coming from...as the thread transitioned from 'How to recognize & avoid people we don't like," to "How to avoid being victimized".
There are some black & white things that are just mine, period, here to stay, and I am uninterested in changing them. But most black & white things, I've come to find, are set ups for disaster. When I see that? I tend to start waving flags.
Looking at traits that make up an abuser? Awesome.
Taking it a step further and declaring all X (like all takers) abusers? Disaster.
Take it a step out of time and look at traits in a vacuum? Like manipulation, or lying, or taking, or physical violence? Also disaster.
Shades of grey become reeeeeally important when looking at people. Especially when looking at how we interact with people.
The best therapists, negotiators, diplomats, & teachers... Are
master manipulators.
The best actors, spies, card players, & writers... Are unparalleled liars.
Some of the best athletes in the world -depends on the sport... Are exquisitely violent.
None of that means that they're good people, or bad people, or people you'd like or dislike if you met them on the street. They've acquired skills. They can use those skills to good purpose, or not. Both in their professional & personal lives. Someone can use a skill set to the noblest purpose in their professional life, and be horrifically abusive using the same skill set in their personal life. And vice versa. And both noble, and both abuse. It's not the skill, or the trait, that makes someone abusive. It's how they
use it.
All all abusers takers? No.
Are all takers abusers? No.
It's not a black and white thing.
To avoid being victimized -isn't always possible- but where it is? Have to see the grey. Or :blackeye:
That's where I was coming from ;)