this post was submitted on 04 Mar 2026
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[–] Jhex@lemmy.world 0 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Ok, still not sure I get you... hurt through empathy is still a good thing (kind of like pain due to exercise)

[–] yakko@feddit.uk 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

In the context of kids using their empathy to survive neglect and abuse... Agree to disagree?

[–] Jhex@lemmy.world -5 points 1 day ago (3 children)

Where is the abuse or neglect of a father being quiet during one dinner?

Again, I do think I know where this is coming from... but what is written in the post is NOT that.

This post is like describing a baseball butt slap as sexual abuse... yes, there is such a thing as sexual abuse but a friendly butt slap in baseball is basically in the baseball manual

[–] yakko@feddit.uk 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

They're not calling those specific things abuse, but if you've lived in an emotionally abusive home they're highly recognisable moments. It sounds like you're coming at this from a slightly too literal frame of mind.

[–] Jhex@lemmy.world 1 points 23 hours ago (2 children)

maybe? but I am just reading the post.

I mean even if the start had been explicit about abusive parents I would have been OK with the post... but even the wording "a household where someone's mood shifts the atmosphere" come on!...

Anecdote time:

I love music and it is rare I am not playing some music when I am at home. When I have been out of town, my kids (grown already) had said the house felt sad because there was no music playing.

Similarly, when our cat of 20 years died, my mood was not very lively and I did not feel like listening to music... ergo, the house was indeed sadder than normal.

This anecdote fits the post to a T... yes I am taking it literally but there are LOTS of ways this could have been written more clearly and not cast a hurried mom (slamming cabinets) or a worried dad (quieter then usual at dinner) as abusive.

Finally, to clarify, this concerns me because TONS of kids read this stuff and swallow it entirely.

[–] Clent@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 19 hours ago (1 children)

Now flip those emotions. Instead of them feeling sad when there is no music playing, they feel happy because music means you're not home.

[–] Jhex@lemmy.world 1 points 7 hours ago (1 children)

why? we get along, we love each other

Again (not sure why this is hard) I UNDERSTAND what the post was going for, I am just complaining it is very poorly written.

If instead of starting with the vague "someone's mood shifts the atmosphere" (which is complete bullshit and can indeed be a completely benign thing) it had started with "an emotionally abusive household" I think the message would have come across a lot more clear. The way it's currently written would certainly cast loving parents in a healthy home as abusive

[–] Clent@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 7 hours ago (1 children)

The post is wirrten by someone who has experienced this and is understood by those who do. For anyone who has grown up in this sort of abusive situation will immediately recognize what it's saying.

Are you aware of what walking on eggshells actually means? I realize it's been watered down much like the term gaslighting and calling people narcissists but to those whoever have experienced the trauma can feel those words.

[–] Jhex@lemmy.world 2 points 7 hours ago

The post is wirrten by someone who has experienced this and is understood by those who do. For anyone who has grown up in this sort of abusive situation will immediately recognize what it’s saying.

And this is why I care… not everyone is super stable/smart/objective/capable of self reflection… this is the irresponsible shit going online that pushes those people the wrong way

This is not an "abusive household" community, the context is not implied

Are you aware of what walking on eggshells actually means?

Yes, and for the umpteenth time, I understood the post. I am just complaining about how poorly written it is... which in my opinion, could be dangerous for some people

[–] yakko@feddit.uk 2 points 22 hours ago* (last edited 12 hours ago) (1 children)

You're fine, I know how weirdly kids can misconstrue things.

Edit: I want to add that I had no part in the down votes ITT, I'm just trying to bridge the disconnect that we seemed to have. A lot of people are understandably upset though, it's a touchy subject!

[–] Jhex@lemmy.world 2 points 7 hours ago

No worries (I rarely even noticed up or down votes)

I am actually surprised how many people just won't read. I have said like 8 times I understood the post, I just find it poorly written and worry vulnerable people may misrepresent it, just to have a million people explaining the post to me.

[–] UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world 3 points 23 hours ago (1 children)

Where is the abuse or neglect of a father being quiet during one dinner?

The implicit presumption is that if someone is quietly fuming now, they'll become physically violent later. Or verbally abusive. Or neglectful to the point of harm (refusing to feed a hungry child or change a dirty diaper out of spite, hunkering down in front of the TV and leaving the kids to put themselves to bed, etc).

But the flip side of this is a child seeing a parent in distress and trying to accommodate/relieve their pain (as opposed to a child blissfully unconcerned/unaware of the parent's stress antagonizing them).

Again, I do think I know where this is coming from…

YMMV. It's very hard to discuss a real historical situations when you're working from a superficial description or hypothetical implication.

I think where OP's narrative goes wrong is in describing tense moments in the house as a parental failure without looking beyond the immediate tension. Relationships aren't some morality play or ethical binary, with a Good Parent and a Bad Child or visa versa. Sometimes you've just got an overwhelmed parent and a child thrust into more responsibility than they're prepared to handle, as a consequence. Or a sick parent being cared for by a child. Or a grieving parent who is being comforted by a child who doesn't really understand what is going on.

A friend of mine just had his father-in-law pass away, and - of course - his wife was devastated. He had to take over all the household affairs while she worked through her grief. His kids, in turn, had to cope with a mom who was emotionally unresponsive and a dad who was juggling twice the workload. I've gotten a few curious anecdotes about how they've been processing the trauma. A lot of it has them replicating the care their parents showed them back onto their parents (as best a 2 year old and 4 year old can).

This post is like describing a baseball butt slap as sexual abuse…

I think even that is too specific. I'm more reading it like someone describing a response to the Jaws soundtrack. Are you excited or intrigued or terrified or all of the above? Kinda depends on how you feel about seeing a big shark.

[–] Jhex@lemmy.world -5 points 23 hours ago (1 children)

The implicit presumption is that if someone is quietly fuming now, they’ll become physically violent later....

That is a gigantic leap... 100% of the population would have many healthy reasons for being quieter than they normally are and the vast majority do not blow up in a violent rage afterwards.

This is exactly my issue with this post.

It’s very hard to discuss a real historical situations when you’re working from a superficial description or hypothetical implication.

Once again, not the point. We can talk hypotheticals all you want but if we are to make a point, it would be best to make a clear one

A friend of mine just had his father-in-law pass away...

Exactly... I don't think it's fair to paint these parents as abusive. Moreover, I do not think there is anything wrong (in this scenario) with kids noticing and trying to help. But this post would paint them as abusive and the child's natural empathy as a toxic defense mechanism

I think even that is too specific...

Indeed it was too specific, but so was the post... a cabinet slam and/or a father being quiet is a far cry from symptoms of an abusive household

[–] UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world 1 points 22 hours ago* (last edited 22 hours ago)

That is a gigantic leap…

From the narrative, sure. But that's the cliche they're leaning on.

This is exactly my issue with this post.

I agree. Like I said, "Jaws Music". The post is supposed to imply a lot more than they're willing to make explicit.

We can talk hypotheticals all you want but if we are to make a point, it would be best to make a clear one

The point of the post is to simulate the feeling of looming dread, then use the emotional response to build empathy with the kid in the story.

I don’t think it’s fair to paint these parents as abusive

This is all allegorical. "These parents" aren't anyone specific. The implication is that the kid in the story is staving off abuse. But, as we've both noted, it's also possible the kid in question is comforting parents who are - themselves - the victims of abuse or neglect.

"Walking on eggshells" implies a consequence if you don't. The consequence could be a parent flying into a rage. It could also be a parent breaking into tears or falling into a fugue state. "I'm trying to avoid getting beaten by my parents" tells a very different story than "I'm trying to prevent my mom/dad from breaking down into a puddle of tears".

a cabinet slam and/or a father being quiet

Implies a high degree of tension.

[–] Akasazh@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Emotionally abusive parents is what is described, you become very sensitive to nonverbal clues of your parent(s).

It's not exaggerating, you really get to live around their personal tripwires. And then assume everybody else has those, which makes it hard to trust people.

[–] Jhex@lemmy.world 0 points 23 hours ago (1 children)

Emotionally abusive parents is what is described

How is a quieter than usual Dad an abusive parent? it is an absolute exaggeration.

Let me explain: a ranging alcoholic, violent father, would trigger all emotional alerts on a kid. As soon as said father arrives home, the kid would be on edge.

So, in a post like this, they basically skipped over the entire context of the raging alcoholism... instead they said it's a red flag when parents arrive and open the door.

I understand the context is supposed to be implied; but the post is just very poorly written. It would be like me saying "you learn quickly to protect your face from a bite as soon as a dog barks"... dogs bark all the time, very few would eat people's faces. In this example, a simple slam of a cabinet or a quieter then usual dad could mean 100000 benign things. OP should have been clear that this was already an abusive environment or at least select better examples of "alerting" behaviour

[–] Akasazh@lemmy.world 2 points 22 hours ago* (last edited 20 hours ago) (1 children)

I agree it could be worded more clearly. Yet for everyone who has lived with this it is clear. Like with depression people always assume its the grand things that hold the sadness, or the madness. It leads people who haven't experienced it to say 'Just do something fun'.

Your example of raging alcoholism is a good example. You would say 'just avoid your parents when they are drunk', which is good advice, but emotionally abusive people are very adept at making amends and smoothing stuff out when they have recovered. They will be super sweet and attentive but -which is the brutal part- always switch to full drama mode when you least expect it. So you learn to pick up minute cues you can use to shield yourself from incoming emotional blows, but sometimes they still manage to surprise you when you've got your guard down.

That's why you can never feel safe around them, there might be a hair trigger going off any moment that you didn't know existed. And whilst you can easily advice people in a realtionship like that to just stay clear of those people, it most likely happens when you are a child and simply unable to just distance yourself. But even grown people still fall into the spiral of just wanting their parents to be proud of them even though they should rationally know it will never happen.

The text is very clear for those who have experienced that. It's very hard to fathom for those who haven't, and those are blessed for it.

[–] Jhex@lemmy.world 1 points 7 hours ago

I agree it could be worded more clearly. Yet for everyone who has lived with this it is clear.

Certainly... but for people who are vulnerable in many other ways, it may paint a rushed mom or a worried dad as abusive when they are not. This is not posted in an "abusive household" community where the context is implied.

You would say ‘just avoid your parents when they are drunk’

I would NOT say that.

Overall you are arguing the wrong things with me. I understood the post and agree that catering to abusive parent's emotions creates bad emotional responses... my point is that the post does not, in anyway, make it clear this is an emotionally abusive household (they almost make a point not to) and then paint completely normal empathetic reactions as defense/survival mechanisms.

A clear post would not use the vague wording "someone's mood changes the atmosphere". If I am your best friend, my dog just died but I still make an effort to go to your birthday party because you are my best friend. My mood is not quite right and you, being my best friend, notice, ask me about it and I cry telling you "Fluffy" just died. My sad mood will absolutely (if temporarily) kill the atmosphere of your party... I guess I am an abusive friend for trying to not bail on your birthday and you are somehow on survival mode because you had empathy for me?

I am using this example "on the other edge" of the spectrum just to show how poorly written the post was and how it can easily fit the most benign scenario

The text is very clear for those who have experienced that. It’s very hard to fathom for those who haven’t, and those are blessed for it.

And this is why I care... not everyone is super stable/smart/objective/capable of self reflection... this is the irresponsible shit going online that pushes those people the wrong way