I’m Offended {And I’m Missing the Point}
In recent weeks, I have been obsessing over the experience of being offended. I’ve been studying it. Listening. Watching. Questioning.
Offense is beyond interesting.
Offense feels like passion.
It feels righteous.
It feels justified.
Being offended makes us feel powerful and productive. When we get offended, it feels very important. It almost feels as if we are getting something accomplished. Which is quite intriguing.
Offense happens when someone disrespects us, devalues us, or disagrees with us.
We also take offense when someone does not respect our pain or validate a loss that we have experienced.
When we are offended, we feel justified to say, feel, or do, whatever we want.
Free pass.
Perhaps we don’t say whatever we want to the person, but we will undoubtedly find someone to express our outrage. We want to be told that we are right in everything that we feel and justified in everything that we said.
Our offense keeps us laser focused on them and their failure. It frees us of any responsibility to own our reactions, emotions or perceptions.
Being offended is centered on the priority to blame them for everything, including the emotions that have risen within us.
When we are offended, grace and compassion are not necessary. We are not looking for a different perspective. We are looking for validation. We want every emotion that we feel to be respected.
Being offended feels powerful, but it’s not. It is actually void of power. We are not valiant. We are emotional.
It is not hard to follow our emotions. It is hard to challenge them.
Don’t get me wrong, I am not talking about changing viewpoints to what the opposing side is saying. I am talking about taking responsibility for the extreme passion, anger or hurt that we allow to go unchecked and unresolved.
We must take responsibility for ourselves.
Our emotions. Our words. Our actions.
We must own them. We should prioritize understanding them. We should be dedicated to maturing them.
Being offended feels productive, but it is only truly productive if we use the experience as an opportunity to grow.
There is so much to learn about ourselves when we are offended.
Why do we feel the way we feel? Why are we so upset? Why are we unable to disagree respectfully? Why did what they said bother or hurt us so much? Why is it important that they agree with us?
Next time we find ourselves offended let’s try to resist the urge to blame.
Next time, let’s embrace the opportunity to grow.
Surprising enough, our job in this life is not to change them.
It is to grow ourselves.
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