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Does anyone know how to productively/supportively receive "venting"-shaped communication, when you don't want to reinforce or implicitly endorse the frame or set or assumptions that the venting is based in?

I feel like I have this dilemma a lot of the time: like, someone wants to share something that they're angry or upset or annoyed about, and clearly wants me to be entirely on their side about the thing, and I want to emotionally support them, understand where they're coming from, and help them process and/or strategize.

But honestly about 80% of the time, especially if it's someone who I'm not extremely close to, I find it really hard to straightforwardly do those things because I feel triggered about the context somehow, either because it seems like it's assuming things I don't believe, or because I feel attacked in some way, e.g. because I often have substantial sympathy toward the target of the anger or annoyance, as well as toward my friend.

I wish I knew what to do in these situations.

in reply to Damon Pourtahmaseb-Sasi

Sure! I don't have an urgent need for this, just a long-standing sense that I should figure it out
in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

Yeah, it can be tough sometimes! My expectation, as a few others have said, is that the first thing people want in situations like this to feel understood, and the second is to feel validated. Staying curious, asking questions, affirming feelings, those all seem like "free actions" in terms of helping someone who's going through some difficult emotions about something, even fi you don't agree with their conclusions or model of reality.

After those actions, the path that might open up and be difficult to navigate is if they begin to press you on your own position or beliefs. But if that first step is hard enough just because of feelings of trigger or unsafety, that would be the first thing to work on; how to keep your emotional balance while someone is expressing things that feel triggery or like they're pulling at you to do or say a certain thing.

Does that resonate so far, or am I far off from the thing you're pointing at?

in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

in reply to kip

Agree with your conclusions. Some people react negatively to questioning (can feel like cross examination / trying to catch them out), in which case it’s important to make sure they feel heard _first_ i.e. lead with empathetic expressions.
in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

I’m going through this problem right now and I’m stuck on the thing that various people mention above about affirming or validating feelings. It’s very hard to come up with a true statement i can utter that acknowledges the feeling well without implying some agreement with the frame.
in reply to David Mears

I ended up using conditionals: “I can understand why you would be upset”, “It would be hurtful to feel [how they interpret the situation]”