tippy2k2 said:
You can take all the snarky passive-agressive shots you want;
Honey, I don't think you understand what "passive-aggressive" is. This is up there with "internet aspergers" and "internet OCD," the things I referenced previously. You may have noticed I give zero fucks about getting in anyone's face at any time when I think they're wrong. This is not characteristic of passive aggression.
I'm here trying to get your side of this debate, which is more than many can claim in an internet forum.
Yes, I got that impression when you posted the video from Billy Madison where his asshole principal says:
Mr. Madison, what you've just said is one of the most insanely idiotic things I have ever heard. At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone in this room is now dumber for having listened to it. I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul.
And to further the point, I will use the followup line from Billy himself:
Okay, a simple "wrong" would've done just fine.
Of course, in that scenario, Billy was actually wrong. In this situation, you would be the one awarded zero points. The irony may escape you as you complain that I'm being passive aggressive and you're trying to understand.
Also, the video title includes "how to troll." I'm not saying that you're trolling, but I think this is quite a strike against the concept of trying to understand.
Every example I've seen myself and every definition that has popped up in here has basically equated "Trigger" with "being offended".
Yo mean, before my previous posts where I say otherwise, right? Because you've already read those and should know better. Oh, and Rhombus offered what should have been considered an example contrary, since he was the one that mentioned physiological triggers. Is it your belief that photosensitive epileptics are "offended" by flashing lights?
Hell, flashing lights can trigger my migraines, which I am not comparing in any way to the severity of epilepsy. That doesn't mean they offend me.
And that's kind of the thing: if you can't swap out the word and have it work, then it's probably not apt.
However, from what you just said to chiggerwood makes me believe that either you have a different definition of what a trigger is or the definition that people in here (and in those articles the OP listed) are using is the incorrect use of trigger.
oh, apparently you didn't read my previous posts then. I've delineated between the use of it on "Tumblr" and even compared it to the tendency of internet goers to self-diagnose with autism, and the way it's used (albeit largely non-clinically) for people with mental illness. If you cannot figure out what's going on with me directly telling you, I don't know what else to say. It does, however, explain your belief that I'm being passive-aggressive if directly telling you something multiple times is too subtle.
As for Chiggerwood, he's describing clinical conditions where the concept of "trigger" is used to describe instantaneous (well, kind of) emotional responses such as flashbacks, the equivalent of shouting "fire" in a crowded theater, and then talking about it being an issue of offense. I have a "different" definition in the same sense that I don't use OCD to describe someone who is fastidious or anal-retentive. But then, a sufferer who's talking about their own triggers probably shouldn't be boiling it down to a case of "offense" in the first place.
So let's level this playing field a bit; what is your definition of "trigger" and can you point me to a source that agrees with that definition?
Well, there's Wikipedia and its citations. Does my doctor or psychologist count? Or my prior psychologist? My girlfriend's deal with therapists who use the term, and besides Wikipedia, you can find numerous web pages (things like webMD, which also cite papers, as well as Google Scholar hits) online dealing with PTSD and triggers, abuse and triggers, trauma and triggers. You know, via Google search or your engine of choice. But I'm confused. According to you, you've already afforded an exception for medical issues. Surely you knew what you yourself were talking about just a little while back.
Is it your opinion that PTSD sufferers are simply "offended?" It would seem not, but if that's what you believe the term means, then shouldn't it apply here?