Quote:
Originally Posted by sunflower227
The best thing about giving support is that you don't have to be confident in yourself to do it really, you just have to care about another person's well being. And after giving what support you have to offer, you may even feel better about yourself for doing it. 
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Sunflower,
I'm truly grateful for the response. I'd like to ask a question about the highlighted portion of your response. I
do care about other's well-being, but candidly, not trying to ruffle anyone's feather here..., if you come on here and tell us that your boyfriend yells at you and puts you down then you are pretty well guarenteed to have a bunch of people tell you that you should leave him and that you deserve better than that.
How does everyone know that? If I see this person here on PC and they are extremely sensitive, often misunderstand others attempts to help, attack whenever they feel attacked etc... then there is a pretty good chance that these character traits are present in her relationship and she's being a bit abusive too. If so, then, depending on how you look at it, they either both deserve better - or neither of them do. I lean toward the latter camp - I think they probably deserve each other, not to be mean but they are equal.
pfft... My examples are awful today; let me just say this: I think that often the only compassionate response is a tough love response, but that isn't seen as compassionate or supportive. Sometimes what passes as compassionate and supportive looks an awful lot like enabling to me. It's so easy to jump right in there and give a 'me too' response but it seems almost like encouraging the same behavior that likely got them into such a position in the first place. Does that make sense?