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Kenneth Berger's avatar

I think viewing frameworks as metaphor is the most important point you're making here! Acolytes of any particular framework tend to bristle at this because they've invested so much in one particular metaphor, but personally I just try out various metaphors with clients and see what works for them. I don't really care what metaphor they latch onto as long as it gets results!

When it comes to "troll" parts, I tend to separate the underlying need from the impact. To me the underlying need almost always is something universal and human like safety, belonging, control, etc. You can validate and normalize the need unconsciously driving it while still being clear and direct about the harm of believing its narratives or using its strategies.

Danny Jeck's avatar

> The healthy response to such trolls is not to spend energy dialoguing with them; it’s to call them out, calmly and succinctly (e.g., “these aren’t real reasons, they’re just excuses”) and speak to the honest fear underneath (e.g., “I know it’s scary to put ourselves out there, but we’ve got this”), then get on with our life.

Do you view this as a kind of exposure therapy solution? I would think in many situations just saying “no you’re wrong” and/or “I’m going to ignore you now and move on with life” wouldn’t be sufficient to deal with the related feelings.

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