1. Taking full personal responsibility without blaming anything or anyone
2. Self control - respond, not react
3. Recognize and admit when you are wrong. And then apologize.
4. Recognize where the areas of personal growth are and work on it
LOVE this.
This discussion (or debate? IRONY) over semantics of words is all distraction. If everyone agreed on every point or didn't have a POV to bring to a conversation, HS would just be a blog with comments that all say, "great job!". There are plenty of those out there. RCR does not filter membership here so everyone is welcome to the party, and sometimes there will be debates. I think LP hit the nail on the head with this:
I can't tell you how much time is wasted when someone reads into a post instead of reading the words there.
We've all been guilty of it, especially when we've had a contentious forum relationship with someone in the past, or just have a particular attitude toward someone that puts their words in a different internal voice than what might be intended.
This is why I didn't understand how out of hand the conversation got on ShockSis's thread. I didn't read any personal attack in the suggestion that SS might not have resolved her MLC. It's not an outlandish suggestion, since it's generally agreed around here that the timeline is not under five years, and doesn't end with the resolution of the marriage (whether requited with the LBS, or turned down by them). And it's not unusual to hit a place in the healing process where you begin to teach a bit. But who knows. As has been pointed out here by pretty much everyone on both sides, we have no idea what really lies behind the words we're all crafting for each other. It's all food for thought for those of us still healing from our perspective experiences.
LP also referenced accommodation and I think that's so important to highlight. We used to talk about co-dependence here and finding the places we may have lost ourselves, either within our spouses MLCs, or within the marriage in general. Accommodation was a big theme, and it's important I think to not transfer co-dependence to the forum and have it need to fulfill that for us. Learning to individuate, sometimes stand against the crowd (standing in general is just that in many ways in regards to society's view of separation and divorce), and find our independence is a gift we didn't expect from this. I wouldn't want to discourage anyone from exploring new ideas and attitudes, or even finding their own voice (which may not always play out perfectly). By needing to have people either confirm our biases or shun those that don't in a sort of "soft-mob mentality", I think it's doing just that.