2026年2月13日 星期五

We’re Learning to Tell the Difference Between Someone’s Intent and Our Own Feelings

 

We’re Learning to Tell the Difference Between Someone’s Intent and Our Own Feelings


When we’re emotionally exhausted, the world can feel like it’s against us. A late reply becomes “they don’t care.” A neutral tone sounds like criticism. A small mistake feels like betrayal.

In those moments, everything gets filtered through our pain. And it becomes easy to confuse how we feel with what the other person intended.

Emotional maturity begins when we can say: “This hurts… but that doesn’t automatically mean someone meant to hurt me.”

This shift doesn’t happen overnight. It comes from building enough inner strength to create a small but powerful distance between our experience and someone else’s motivation.

For example:

  • Your friend cancels plans last minute. Old you: “They don’t value me.” Growing you: “I’m disappointed, but maybe they’re overwhelmed too.”

  • Your partner forgets something important. Old you: “They don’t care about my feelings.” Growing you: “This hurts, but it might be forgetfulness, not neglect.”

  • A coworker sounds blunt. Old you: “They’re attacking me.” Growing you: “I feel stung, but maybe they’re stressed, not hostile.”

This isn’t about excusing harmful behaviour. It’s about refusing to jump straight into a victim narrative that leaves us powerless.

When we can separate “I feel hurt” from “you wanted to hurt me,” we regain psychological agency. We can:

  • express our feelings without accusing

  • set boundaries without hostility

  • repair misunderstandings instead of escalating them

  • choose responses instead of reacting on instinct

It gives us room to breathe, to think, and to respond with clarity rather than fear.

Because the goal isn’t to stop feeling pain — pain is part of being human. The goal is to stop letting every sting turn the world into an enemy.

This is how we grow into someone who can feel deeply, think clearly, and choose wisely.