I heard that disabled people dislike getting sympathy, and I had trouble understanding that. But then later I was somewhat disabled, and received some unwanted sympathy, and I found it really horrible. I had a very strong feeling, maybe it could be called humiliation.So then I understood; but I don’t know how to explain that to people who haven’t experienced it. My theory: people like sympathy if something bad has just happened, but if it’s long-term then it’s normal for them.
Author: Real Social Skills
When you prefer not to decide something
Read the post about consent problems. Curious about not quite opposite problem. Lack of opinion/preference being mistaken as consent problem e.g. “Where do you wanna go for lunch?” “I’m fine with wherever you want .” “Yeah, but, where do /you/ want?”
- “I’d like you to pick a place.”
- “I’m kind of tired of all the places I go, do you know of somewhere good?”
If you say it this way, it’s clearer that you’re actually *expressing* a preference (that they decide), and it looks less like you’re avoiding saying what you want in order to be polite.
Another possibility is to ask them for help narrowing it down, eg:
- “Can you give me some options?”
- “What are some places you like?”
Then, if you really don’t have a preference, you can pick one of their suggestions at random. And if you do have a preference, hearing a list can make it easier to make a choice.
These approaches don’t always work, but they do in a lot of situations.
Listening to Someone Facing a Bad Situation
I have a question and don’t know if you already answered something like it. How can you show support for someone without making it about yourself? like *someone talking about a crap thing that happened* *I answer with how a similar crap thing happened to me or someone I know* I just don’t know what to say other than “well that sucks”, but I always feel like that comes across as not caring (and so does my other approach tbh…)
- “That sounds hard”
- “It sounds like things are really hard right now”
- “It sounds like a lot of people are hurting you”
Another way you can create space is to just sit with them. There don’t always have to be words. Sometimes, pauses are important. Don’t try to fill all of them.
Another way you can create space is by listening to what they’re saying, and repeating part of it in a tone that indicates that you’re asking about it:
- It’s somewhat hard to describe how to do this
- Because formulaically repeating everything someone says is obnoxious
- But if you choose well what to repeat, it can indicate that you understand what they’re saying, and that you want to listen to more of what they have to say
- And then, you can respond with your own words when you have things to say that might help
Eg:
- Susan: The crap thing happened to me *again*.
- Debra: Again?!
- Susan: Yes. The people who do that thing always do the thing!
- Debra: They always do it?
- Susan: Yes, they do that every single day. Sometimes multiple times. I can’t get them to stop because they outrank me and if I complain I’ll be fired.
Sometimes, people want more from you than just listening. Sometimes, they want advice or practical support. It’s ok and good to offer it, but bad for you to try to take over the conversation with it.
For instance, say the conversation continued:
- Debra: You’ll be fired?
- Susan: Yes – the last five women who complained all got fired last month.
- Debra: I know a good lawyer who does that kind of work – would you like their contact information?
- Susan: Maybe. I’m not sure it would do any good though. I really can’t afford to lose this job.
Debra here thought that she knew something that might help, and offered it to Susan. Debra didn’t try to force it on Susan. This was a good way to offer support. Here’s a different way the conversation could have gone:
- Debra: That’s illegal! You should totally sue them! I’ll tell my lawyer about this, they’ve done a lot of this kind of work.
- Susan: I don’t think that’s a good idea – I REALLY can’t afford to lose this job.
- Debra: Don’t be silly. The law is on your side. Don’t you want to protect other women from the crap thing they do every day?
Here, Debra isn’t listening to Susan. She thinks she knows best, and wants to push Susan into doing it. That’s not a good way to support others. Push come to shove, people need to make their own decisions, and trying to control them causes a lot of problems.
Sometimes it can work to relate things to your own experiences, but in a way that doesn’t take over the conversation. For instance:
- Bob: This crap thing happened to me!
- James: That sounds awful.
- Bob: Yes, it is awful. And on top of that, they made it even worse by ___.
- James: I think something similar happened to me last year.
Here, James waits to see if Bob picks up that line of conversation, and reacts according to what Bob wants to talk about. Eg, say it went this way:
- James: I think something similar happened to me last year.
- Bob: What happened with you?
- James: Related crap thing happened.
- Bob: Huh. What did you do about that?
- (and then they continue the conversation, and talk about their shared experiences)
Another way this could have gone:
- James: I think something similar happened to me last year.
- Bob: Huh. Well, and then I yelled at them for doing the crap thing, and then I got in trouble for yelling!
- James: You got in trouble for yelling at them?
- (here, the conversation continues based on what Bob wants to talk about. Since Bob wants to talk about his experience and not James’, James shows support for Bob by dropping it and listening to him)
In short:
- When someone wants to talk to you about something awful that happened to them, make sure you’re listening and not taking up all of the space.
- If they want advice or practical help and you have some to offer, offer it. Don’t try to take over and tell them what to do.
- If you have shared experience, offer to talk about it if it seems possibly welcome. Drop it if they want to talk about their own experience and not yours
- If they just want you to listen, listen.
- In any case, follow their lead and make sure it’s about supporting them.
On not opening a discussion
I would probably do this: The first time, just pull away. That should give them a message. If they keep doing it just as often, the next time, say something low-key like “Please don’t touch my leg” or “I’d rather not hold hands” or “I prefer not to be touched” or just “Sorry, no” while pulling away. That should give them a message. If they keep doing it just as often, the next time give a firmer message like “It bothers me when you touch me like that.” That should open a discussion.
Arguing isn’t always ok
… If someone acts defensive and argues when you criticize them for touching you, and from then on is very careful not to touch you, then they’re just nervous and don’t like criticism. That’s fine. The problem would be if they really act as if they have a right to touch you after you’ve asked them not to. Or actually the problem would be if they keep doing it, for whatever reason.
Saying no to unwanted touch
A reader asked:
One of my friends has recently begun touching me a lot, either by grabbing my hand or knee etc in situations that don’t necessarily feel they warrant such contact and don’t actually feel organic.
At best this is just a case of her being too physical and making me uncomf, at worst, knowing that I’m queer, it may be that she is trying to make me her “experiment,” despite also knowing I’m in a monog. relat.
I can’t tell exactly if I’m overreacting or not but either way, if this continues, I’m not at all sure I know how to handle the situation. It’s difficult for me to imagine navigating this type of conversation, esp if I want to keep the friendship (since I know what I would do if this was a situation with a man, or someone with whom I didn’t want to maintain a friendship).
Plus, being a survivor makes navigating all of this all the more difficult. I would appreciate your advice, thank you.
realsocialskills said:
I don’t have a lot of experience defusing this kind of situation successfully, so I’m not sure my answer will be a good one.
This is my best guess:
First of all, I think you’re probably not overreacting:
- When people repeatedly touch others in invasive ways, it’s usually not an accident
- It’s really, really common for people to touch others in invasive ways that are just-barely-deniable
- People who think others are touching them in creepy ways are usually right
- This is especially true if the person who is touching you invasively *used* to only touch you in ways you were ok with
Second of all, regardless of why she’s touching you, it’s ok to want it to stop:
- There are all kinds of reasons that friends sometimes don’t want to be touched in various ways
- If you don’t want her touching your leg or holding your hand, it’s absolutely your right to have it stop
- If she’s doing this unintentionally, telling her in the moment to stop might solve the problem
- Friends do sometimes inadvertently violate the boundaries of friends, *and if they respect their friends, they stop when they find out it isn’t welcome*
Things you might say (possibly in combination with pulling away or pushing her hand away from where you don’t want it to be):
- “I don’t like that”
- “I don’t want to hold hands”
- “Please don’t touch my leg”
- And if it is repeated, you might add “I meant it”.
She might respond by angrily denying that she’s doing anything wrong. That’s a sign that something is seriously wrong:
- Telling her to stop touching you in ways you don’t like is not an accusation
- It just means telling her that you don’t like it and want it to stop
- It might hurt to hear that, because nobody likes hearing that they’ve done something wrong. But if she lashes out at you about it, that’s a sign that she feels entitled to your body
- And whether or not it’s sexually motivated, that’s a major problem
- I wrote this post and this post about that kind of reaction
Captain Awkward also has a post on unwanted and possibly-sexual touching from friends which might be helpful.
False assumptions made about wheelchair users
There are also cases of false assumptions being made about wheelchair users – e.g. they have full hand function, that they aren’t heavy etc. There have been a number of times my dad’s been trapped in lifts because you need to press the small lift buttons (he doesn’t have fine hand control) and the lift can’t carry him (a fully-grown, slightly overweight man) his electric wheelchair (built in the 1980s), and a button-pusher, due to weight restrictions or space in the lift car.
Don’t miswrite dialects
So, I’ve seen this problem when people want to write characters from a culture other than their own:
- They know that those characters speak a different dialect than they do
- And they want to convey this
- But they don’t realize the dialect actually has a rich grammar and other idioms and conventions
- So they end up just using a lot of stereotypes, or mis-using well-known attributes of the dialect
- For instance, white authors who want to write characters who speak AAVE often misuse “be” as an indicator (by replacing “is” with “be” at random times rather than learning how “be” actually functions grammatically and writing it correctly.)
It’s important not to do that. If you want to write dialogue in a particular dialect, it’s important to actually learn that dialect so that you can write it correctly.
Some ways that ramps can be inaccessible
I agree with you. I’d just like more information so I can understand it better and imagine it more clearly. How exactly do the people with strollers make the ramps inaccessible to wheelchair users? Do they also make the ramps inaccessible to other stroller users? Or is using a wheelchair on a ramp a lot more difficult than using a stroller on a ramp? Do the wheelchair users need a lot of space? How much? Do they need to use momentum? How can you tell if someone wants to use the ramp?
Wishful thinking
If you think someone is a jerk.
And then you’re attracted to them sexually.
Or they offer you a job you really want.
Or they introduce you to a really cool group of people you look forward to spending time with.
Or you otherwise want something from them.
And then you stop feeling like they’re a jerk.
They’re probably still a jerk. You were probably right the first time.
If you think you’re right now, think through why that is. Why did you think they were a jerk before? Do you have new information? Has anything changed?
Don’t just assume your now-good feeling about them is right.
Wishful thinking is a powerful thing, and it can lead you astray.