I agree with all that you say, Storm...
but DO I (general) really feel hate if I say that to my child (in a moment of frustration and panic where I'm ripping jammies off and shoving clothes on a tiny body bc we're running late and I'm positive that I will be seen as a failure and a fraud and a loser by the teachers and other mommies', who I'm sure already suspect I'm those things..... bc I suspect them myself?)
Pretty sure it's not hate for my child I have to own and explore.... it's the feelings behind the thought. SAYING those words, to me.... is like saying....
'SHUT UP!'... or 'STFU!' I wouldn't and I don't think either need to be said, not that you believe they do either. I simply would never deal with feelings, myself, using those words or giving anyone permission to use them.
(disclaimer: I have said those things to someone who was lying to me wholesale and wouldn't stop.... they were also abusive and feeling maddeningly entitled. Do I feel they're proper and correct when used with someone we no longer value and are trying to avoid? Not sure but.... they had to come out. So, I agree with you there, don't I?)
I don't like those words and would never use them with someone I wanted an ongoing relationship with. I will say that.
Words like that are very expensive.... 99.9% of the time they're way out of my price range.
Ah, but look at what I actually said, now.
I did not say: go tell everyone you hate exactly how you feel about them. Scream at them, abuse them, tell them to shut up, let it all hang out.
Not at all. Not even remotely.
I did say: unless you can admit to yourself that you feel these things, unless you can recognize in yourself the overwhelming desire to do these things, you are probably going to spend the rest of your life trapped by them, in one way or another, when it's so much nicer [and over so much faster] simply to face them and deal with them.
Using 'you' in the generic sense, and including me in that generic 'you' as well.
Funny timing. I picked up a diet pamphlet yesterday on impulse, while the checkout clerk was having a 20 minute confab with the guy in line in front of me, ringing up one item at a time, with three sentences per item. What I found in it made me chuckle hugely.
It's published by Prevention magazine, and authored &/or edited by a fellow named Bob Greene, who is apparently on Oprah a lot. This is what it says [pages 17 and 18, PreventionGuide 'Best Life Diet Planner']
"With a strong emotional foundation, everything you build ... will stand tall and firm. That foundation begins with four basic cornerstones: honesty, responsibility, commitment, and inner strength. These qualities are the building blocks of success in weight loss and all other facets of life. Here's how they work:
"HONESTY You want to change? Stop wearing blinders. It's essential to be honest about your weaknesses and past failures in order to succeed. ...
"The point of honest self-exploration is not to beat yourself up about your shortcomings. Rather, it's to learn something you didn't know about yourself, or, if you did know it on some level, to finally admit it. ... When you're honest with yourself, you can break unhealthy patterns and build on positive ones.
"RESPONSIBILITY Successful people take responsibility for their past actions. Follow their lead. To begin, stop pointing the blame elsewhere ...
"COMMITMENT Another characteristic of successful people? They keep commitments. ... Your commitment to yourself needs to be sacred.
"INNER STRENGTH Inner strength is often what tilts the scale from failure to success.. ... each time you make the healthier choice, your inner strength flourishes and those temptations become easier to defeat."
Shoot, this is exactly what I've been saying here for years, and it's the gist of what I said on this thread.
It's not controversial; it's not rocket science. Dunno why folks react as though it were.