Been reading this thread and just going to through out my two cents. (Like this is unusual :p)
1. Quite frankly, depending upon a person's state of mind and their personality, different people are going to take different words however they choose. It is entirely individual, and if they are stuck in a bad place emotionally, yes the term "pity party", "get over it" etc. can either make them angry, more depressed, or quite frankly fuel their own negative personalizations to spiral further down.
So, isn't that incentive to use a better choice of words? That isn't walking on eggshells it's jus tbeing sensitive to the fact that you don't know the person well enough to know how they will be affected by those words...and lets face it, most people don't respond well to "get over it".
2. But no one else is responsible for another's feelings, state of mind or personality. No one should have to walk on eggshells around another person that is close to them. I think when you are in a sufferer/supporter relationship, each knows the other well enough to know what is or is not needed at the time. Truth is always best, and how the message is delivered is completely between the messenger and the recipient. It is not the "words" it is the intent and how they are perceived that can either help or hurt.
No, no one is responsable for anyone else feelings, state of mind or personality. No one should have to walk on eggshells around them, and the sufferer/supporter relationship will have that intimate knowledge of what to say at the right time, if they know each other well enough, hopefully...but others on a forum don't have that level of understanding.
I'm not sure I agree that it's not the words, but only the intent that matters. Even if the intent is good it can still cause a lot of upset and distress if the person is not in the right frame of mind to be able to digest what is being told to them. If a person is not suffering at the time, and they aren't traumatized then yeah, upsetting them with the truth is something that they will be able to appreciate, even if they don't like to hear it...whereas, for someone who is really hurting, I'm not sure hurting them more to be truthful is really the best approach? That's just me though.
3. Most of us on this site have PTSD due to unhealthy and harmful relationships: child abuse, sexual abuse, domestic violence, etc. Having PTSD makes a person ill equipped, or quite frankly, unable to have a healthy relationship at certain points in time, the majority of the time, or for some all the time. Those around us can also loose their ability to maintain a healthy relationship due to the "fear" of setting us off or aggravating symptoms. That is why using this forum as a means to interact with different types of people and "test" relationship skills makes it so valuable. Worrying too much about what is said or how a person will react keeps both the sufferer and the supporter from overcoming interpersonal and relationship skills that are damaged.
Of course, the messenger can only go by what information they know about the person they are trying to help, and if the other person does not specifically ask for gentle assistance, then it is hard to know where they are at. It's up to the sufferer to share that they aren't in a great place right now and not sure they can handle anything too harsh.
Truth without malice is nothing to be afraid of. One thing I read about a lot here is people feeling like they "don't know who they are", "lost their old selves" etc. Start by being, and expressing yourself from your heart. Learn new skills and try new things.
There does seem to be a lot of people in fear-based mentalities here who don't push through that, which is a shame for them.
Sometimes I benefit greatly from "raw" truth. I call it "board therapy", because it feels like a 2 X 4 upside the head, and I need it to dislodge my head from my ass. I may not initially like it, but who does like having a negative behavior, pointed out to them? It is the person's choice to either pout, make excuses or use it to make a change.
I agree. I'm a person who responds to this in the same way. I think with the terms pity party though, it is often said with this tone of making the person somehow 'wrong', and that's what I find unhelpful.
If certain phrases really bother an individual to the extent that I have seen on this forum, then you are really in trouble. This is a very safe place and the majority of people here are very cognizant of PTSD symptoms and how they affect a person's frame of mind. If you can't handle it here then you are in real trouble out in the world. Think about that a bit, and whether you are a supporter or a sufferer, use this as a place to heal. If not, leave as no one makes anyone stay here and allow the rest of us to grow and get better.
I can read that the way it is meant, and agree with it. I'm not sure a person who is very traumatized, and feeling like they have no skin at all, would be able to read this without interpretting your words as saying "there is something wrong with me that I can't take the words pity party the way everyone else means them." And spiral downwards.
Of course, it can go round and round like this forever. I think the majority here are able to handle a bit of truth when it is thrown at them, but for new people that might not be the case?