I appreciate the dissection of the impact on communication that certain terms now have but disagree with the "trigger" rubric that tries to tie them all together. Ironically, "trigger" itself may belong on the list of words to stop using, according to this rubric.
Some usages, like calling people "resources," have always been demeaning and should be avoided for that reason. Others have become victims of their own success, being novel and having a specific meaning initially but have become overexposed, diluted, and misappropriated into meaninglessness. This is a more interesting problem, because one needs a way to honor the original thought that went into the term while separating from mass misusage. Then there are words that have been labeled as triggers or taboos by similar cultural processes that misappropriate other terms. Not using them is just jumping on the bandwagon as a substitute for thinking critically. "Master" is an example I have in mind here.
The point being that avoiding terms is one way to force oneself to think about meaning but this, too can become thoughtless and automatic. There's no formula for staying ahead of mere formulaic behavior.
Great points. My thinking is we all have relationships with these words, "Trigger" included, and I think discussing these relationships with other people is a great way to get to know how others think and a great way to develop a personal connection. I really appreciate you sharing your thoughts on the matter, Jonathan.
I appreciate the dissection of the impact on communication that certain terms now have but disagree with the "trigger" rubric that tries to tie them all together. Ironically, "trigger" itself may belong on the list of words to stop using, according to this rubric.
Some usages, like calling people "resources," have always been demeaning and should be avoided for that reason. Others have become victims of their own success, being novel and having a specific meaning initially but have become overexposed, diluted, and misappropriated into meaninglessness. This is a more interesting problem, because one needs a way to honor the original thought that went into the term while separating from mass misusage. Then there are words that have been labeled as triggers or taboos by similar cultural processes that misappropriate other terms. Not using them is just jumping on the bandwagon as a substitute for thinking critically. "Master" is an example I have in mind here.
The point being that avoiding terms is one way to force oneself to think about meaning but this, too can become thoughtless and automatic. There's no formula for staying ahead of mere formulaic behavior.
Great points. My thinking is we all have relationships with these words, "Trigger" included, and I think discussing these relationships with other people is a great way to get to know how others think and a great way to develop a personal connection. I really appreciate you sharing your thoughts on the matter, Jonathan.