(this is an edited version of a comment I made on one of Fayanora's posts a few years back. Figured it deserved wider distribution:
"There’s a form of mental torture called “gaslighting,” its name taken from a play in which a man..." http://t.co/bMtUp2LccQ Abuse survivors deal with this a lot, and even more so when they are still being abused.
It's due to a major disconnect most folks have.
They (wrongly) believe that *intent* matters. So if it wasn't intended as abuse, it's not actually abusive.
But in reality, intent *doesn't* matter. You can do something with the best of intentions and still hurt someone if they are wired that way.
A good example is allergies. I don't care *how* much care and love you put into that dish of X. If I'm allergic to something in it, you'll put me in the hospital (or the morgue) by making me eat it.
Same thing applies to abusive behavior. Even the racial stuff and GLBT stuff.
But people will fight bitterly to avoid acknowledging this. Because if they do, it means they have to accept several things that they don't want to.
That good intentions don't matter. That other people are not like them, and thus don't react like they do. And worst of all, that being different that way is *not* wrong.
And that last is why so many reactions to getting called on stuff boil down to "you're doing this just to be contrary" (because they *literally* can't conceive of someone actually being/thinking "that" way)
I blame the golden rule for a lot of this. It *inherently assumes* that other people are just like you. The allergy example I used above points out the problems with that.
And gee, ever notice how many people don't *really* believe that allergies exist, they think that they are just people being unreasonably "picky".
Funny how that looks like the folks who claim that they aren't being insensitive/abusive.
The version of the "golden rule" used in metalaw works better but people really hate it:
Do unto others as they would have you do unto them.
People immediately jump to "but they can abuse that for all sorts of things". Which says a lot about how they think...