Edit: I believe that if it is plain there is no intention of insult, insult does not exist.
I plainly said that I wasn’t aggressive towards him, that i was afraid my words can be interpreted like that, and that i wanted to cut that possibility off with words “i love you”.
I have positive record with that tactic, people have understood my attitude like that in the past, and I expected it to work again. It didn’t, and that is fine. Maybe I need better technique to express myself, but that is different topic now, and not important since I expressed everything explicitly afterwards (and now again). Why are you still behaving like I wanted to insult him with these words? You clearly see I don’t have that intention.
it is your responsibility to understand them.
Yeah, it is, but today i don’t understand. The only thing i see is related to “mother love” and sounding like I am above him, but I can’t make a clear case out of it. And understanding is not dirty dishes, I cannot just make a decision to understand them and do it in a few minutes. Maybe I’ll read something on that topic this year.
I think it’s your responsibility that if you see what I expressed and what i wanted to express, you take what I wanted to express (you can even warn me that I expressed wrongly, if you feel so.)
I plainly said that I wasn’t aggressive towards him, that i was afraid my words can be interpreted like that, and that i wanted to cut that possibility off with words “i love you”.
You can’t add a disclaimer “Don’t interpret my words as aggressive” and then be able to say anything at all without it being interpreted as aggressive. After all, anyone who does have aggressive intentions and just wants to lie about it can use any disclaimer that you can use.
Even as a disclaimer, “I love you” is not very good.
The reason why it is insulting is that using excessive familiarity with an opponent is a type of insult. I’m sure I could find some explanation for it (sounding like you’re above him is pretty close), but really, you just need to know that certain things are insults. Understanding why they are insults is less important than understanding that they are insults.
You can’t add a disclaimer “Don’t interpret my words as aggressive”
Well, you can often interpret someone’s words many ways. Just because you cannot see the person, and you cannot get information about their emotional state. So, i think you can write something that can be understood many ways, and add a disclaimer, “it’s not the other thing”.
Regarding
using excessive familiarity with an opponent is a type of insult
I never saw this. Maybe we are from different areas, and this could be explained through cultural difference. First, I am thought to never approach opponent as an enemy, and to always keep in mind they are like me (meaning they are humans, with feelings, with ideas, with goals, with hobbies, with experiences) and not empty, emotionless, evil, etc. Furthermore, I approach discussion as a cooperative activity, since its purpose is to improve both me and the guy I discuss with, and give us both insight in something new. That’s why I never saw “familiarity” being looked upon, since that behavior highlights those two mindsets.
However, I acknowledge there are people with different background, who have different approach (different, not opposite). And now I acknowledge some people could perceive familiarity as insult. Would you mind explaining me how does that insult work? I don’t even have a feeling for it. The closest I ever encountered was where middle-high-class-old-lady meets some homeless person who says something along the lines of “we are the same” and then she stops him to say they are not the same, etc, but that is pretty far from this case.
So, i think you can write something that can be understood many ways, and add a disclaimer, “it’s not the other thing”
You can try, but it’s unlikely to work, because anyone who wants to be aggressive and lie about it can say exactly the same thing as you.
Would you mind explaining me how does that insult work?
Yes, I’d mind. Because you can reply “I don’t understand your explanation (or I think your explanation is wrong), and since I don’t understand it, I can keep using the insult”.
That’s wrong. You need to stop using insults whether you understand why they are insults or not. You can’t use “I don’t understand the insult” or “nobody has explained it to me properly” as an excuse to keep saying it.
You don’t use some words only if you think the other guy would classify that as an insult (unless you want to insult him). If you dont know someone classifies something as an insult, you might use it on accident.
There is a set of rules that I use to describe an insult (which I have gotten from my culture). You have one, probably everybody has some set of rules. Some general set of rules. If my set of rules does not classify something as an insult, I will think it is safe to say that.
If it happens that I say something, which you consider an insult, and I don’t, unless I understand what is it about, I will need to remember “never tell to Jiro that you love him” (I simplify for the sake of shortness, but there are other parameters inside that statement). I assume there is an underlying explanation behind your rule. This is probably not the only thing you would consider an insult and i wouldn’t. Maybe you will consider an insult “I hate you”, “I like your dog”, “You love me”, or whatever, but I cannot deduce that based on the “never tell Jiro that you love him”.
Help me. I literary see chaos in your statements. I cannot deduce anything better than “Jiro (and maybe culture he is coming from) is quite different from the people (cultures) I faced already”. I don’t know if you can imagine that state of knowledge about something. It’s mostly empty with only one example.
If you dont know someone classifies something as an insult, you might use it on accident.
Well, now you know.
What I am trying to avoid is
I explain why the statement is an insult
You think “that’s not a very good reason” or “that’s not my motivation”.
You decide that because you don’t think the reason is very good, you can keep using it. Or you decide that because your motivation doesn’t match the reason, you can keep using it.
I cannot deduce anything better than “Jiro (and maybe culture he is coming from) is quite different from the people (cultures) I faced already”.
If you think I’m the only person who sees such things as insulting, and that the cultures you have already faced do not, you haven’t been paying attention.
Edit: I believe that if it is plain there is no intention of insult, insult does not exist.
I plainly said that I wasn’t aggressive towards him, that i was afraid my words can be interpreted like that, and that i wanted to cut that possibility off with words “i love you”.
I have positive record with that tactic, people have understood my attitude like that in the past, and I expected it to work again. It didn’t, and that is fine. Maybe I need better technique to express myself, but that is different topic now, and not important since I expressed everything explicitly afterwards (and now again). Why are you still behaving like I wanted to insult him with these words? You clearly see I don’t have that intention.
Yeah, it is, but today i don’t understand. The only thing i see is related to “mother love” and sounding like I am above him, but I can’t make a clear case out of it. And understanding is not dirty dishes, I cannot just make a decision to understand them and do it in a few minutes. Maybe I’ll read something on that topic this year. I think it’s your responsibility that if you see what I expressed and what i wanted to express, you take what I wanted to express (you can even warn me that I expressed wrongly, if you feel so.)
You can’t add a disclaimer “Don’t interpret my words as aggressive” and then be able to say anything at all without it being interpreted as aggressive. After all, anyone who does have aggressive intentions and just wants to lie about it can use any disclaimer that you can use.
Even as a disclaimer, “I love you” is not very good.
The reason why it is insulting is that using excessive familiarity with an opponent is a type of insult. I’m sure I could find some explanation for it (sounding like you’re above him is pretty close), but really, you just need to know that certain things are insults. Understanding why they are insults is less important than understanding that they are insults.
Well, you can often interpret someone’s words many ways. Just because you cannot see the person, and you cannot get information about their emotional state. So, i think you can write something that can be understood many ways, and add a disclaimer, “it’s not the other thing”.
Regarding
I never saw this. Maybe we are from different areas, and this could be explained through cultural difference. First, I am thought to never approach opponent as an enemy, and to always keep in mind they are like me (meaning they are humans, with feelings, with ideas, with goals, with hobbies, with experiences) and not empty, emotionless, evil, etc. Furthermore, I approach discussion as a cooperative activity, since its purpose is to improve both me and the guy I discuss with, and give us both insight in something new. That’s why I never saw “familiarity” being looked upon, since that behavior highlights those two mindsets.
However, I acknowledge there are people with different background, who have different approach (different, not opposite). And now I acknowledge some people could perceive familiarity as insult. Would you mind explaining me how does that insult work? I don’t even have a feeling for it. The closest I ever encountered was where middle-high-class-old-lady meets some homeless person who says something along the lines of “we are the same” and then she stops him to say they are not the same, etc, but that is pretty far from this case.
Edit: formatting and spelling.
You can try, but it’s unlikely to work, because anyone who wants to be aggressive and lie about it can say exactly the same thing as you.
Yes, I’d mind. Because you can reply “I don’t understand your explanation (or I think your explanation is wrong), and since I don’t understand it, I can keep using the insult”.
That’s wrong. You need to stop using insults whether you understand why they are insults or not. You can’t use “I don’t understand the insult” or “nobody has explained it to me properly” as an excuse to keep saying it.
You don’t use some words only if you think the other guy would classify that as an insult (unless you want to insult him). If you dont know someone classifies something as an insult, you might use it on accident.
There is a set of rules that I use to describe an insult (which I have gotten from my culture). You have one, probably everybody has some set of rules. Some general set of rules. If my set of rules does not classify something as an insult, I will think it is safe to say that.
If it happens that I say something, which you consider an insult, and I don’t, unless I understand what is it about, I will need to remember “never tell to Jiro that you love him” (I simplify for the sake of shortness, but there are other parameters inside that statement). I assume there is an underlying explanation behind your rule. This is probably not the only thing you would consider an insult and i wouldn’t. Maybe you will consider an insult “I hate you”, “I like your dog”, “You love me”, or whatever, but I cannot deduce that based on the “never tell Jiro that you love him”.
Help me. I literary see chaos in your statements. I cannot deduce anything better than “Jiro (and maybe culture he is coming from) is quite different from the people (cultures) I faced already”. I don’t know if you can imagine that state of knowledge about something. It’s mostly empty with only one example.
Well, now you know.
What I am trying to avoid is
I explain why the statement is an insult
You think “that’s not a very good reason” or “that’s not my motivation”.
You decide that because you don’t think the reason is very good, you can keep using it. Or you decide that because your motivation doesn’t match the reason, you can keep using it.
If you think I’m the only person who sees such things as insulting, and that the cultures you have already faced do not, you haven’t been paying attention.