tippy2k2 said:
EDIT: Hell, I even waited to put the Billy Madison thing in until I got "definitions" from multiple people.
I've told you what I've seen as the definition most have been using for trigger and what I've seen from people online (namely, "Triggers" and "I'm offended" have been used interchangeably). Hell, the definition most everyone in this thread has been using has been "I'm offended" when referring to triggers.
Tippy, you're a good guy, but you need to not look to internet forums for descriptions of complicated psychological phenomena. Especially forums like this one, where a statistically significant portion of users believe compassion is for pantywaists, that liberal propaganda has poisoned their hobby, and that anyone anywhere who has ever been hurt or traumatized is making it up to get attention and make them feel bad.
The term "trigger" does indeed get misused by people, sometimes to indicate just about anything that gets under their skin, or they believe is inappropriate for discussion. They do not understand the nature of the term. Neither do some of the keyboard heroes in this thread eager to tell you it originated on Tumblr and is e-speak for "I am offended". PTSD is a real thing. It's not unique to rape survivors or soldiers on the battlefield. Some people, through no fault of their own, can experience extraordinarily debilitating symptoms from a mention or encounter with visual or audible stimula that recall a traumatic event. It is not wrong for those people to request a little extra consideration.
I lost my Dad, suddenly, about 7 years ago, to an aneurysm. My Mom was the one who found him, and tried to revive him. He was two weeks from retirement. For years she could barely even talk about him without becoming profoundly upset. Certain topics, such as "retirement", or anniversaries, or times of year, would instigate CRASHING episodes of clinical depression that continue to this day. Home movies of finding his body would start playing in her head. To the point of grief-stricken phone conversations where she'd wonder aloud if we wouldn't be better off committing suicide so we could get life support money.
She'd never snap at or blame anyone for upsetting her, and her symptoms are usually tied to unavoidable events rather than thoughtless comments, but her symptoms are quite painfully real. She's done everything right, in terms of getting therapy, taking medication, reaching out for support, etc, but that doesn't change the reality that she can be plunged into panic or black depression at the snap of a finger.
Now, according to some of the talking heads on this forum, her experiences and emotions are absolutely meaningless, triggers are nonsense, PTSD is unique to Vietnam vets and being an asshole and speaking your mind about everything to everyone is the single most important quality for any given person to have.
If you want information that does not come from such individuals, just google it. Here's the wiki link.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trauma_trigger
You'll note the debate around the concept of "trigger warnings", which I think is constructive and healthy. I'm not sure what I think of "trigger warnings" myself, and think the argument that a culture of avoidance isn't healthy is cogent. Triggers, however, are absolutely real, and it costs nothing to be sympathetic and aware.