Not quite. We are saying the same principle applies to both situations.
It absolutely, positively does not.
If the brother had ptsd set off by fireworks he absolutely should have stayed away from a bbq with them. If the other brother wanted to accommodate his brother so he could come then he certainly should eliminate the fireworks.
That is an extremely crappy attitude and I will not hide my disdain for it.
No one is saying don’t do that. We are saying it shouldn’t be a mandatory expectation. That’s where you are getting pushback. It doesn’t mean someone is a bad person if they don’t accommodate all potential issues at all times.
You've just committed the error again: "accommodate
all potential issues." No. No one is asking for that. People are asking for
reasonable accommodation of
serious issues
when said accommodation costs little to nothing for those accommodating, especially when it's
extremely difficult for the person in need of accommodation to actually ask, due to the MANY social pressures to suffer silently or withdraw completely.
YOU are the one turning this into something monstrous. Stop.
Considering we don’t know what actions he took or anyone else’s perspective we cannot really say. I think it’s likely he wasn’t, but you’ve not provided the details required to validate that assertion.
Then why not take him at his word? You took him at his word for all the stuff before this. Why is
this not the same way?
I think that’s objectively less selfish (unless he thought they wanted to spend time with him more than fireworks - a distinct possibility but again not verified by your story).
See above.
The only question is about how they become safe. You say always accommodate. We say sometimes do that but sometimes the person with the issue may sometimes needs to pass on a specific activity.
Okay. Have you not noticed the numerous, extensive times where we've mentioned that safety tools are about fostering conversations that can be incredibly difficult for people to have? That they're about showing respect to others? That they're about helping people work together, and require people to be reasonable participants in good faith?
Because it really seems like you're going out of your way to either pretend nobody ever mentioned that, or acting like every single person in this thread who has done so is lying about it, or somehow thinking that crappy, abusive uses of this stuff is somehow a HORRIBLE PLAGUE UPON BOTH YOUR HOUSES when actually such abuses are
extremely rare.
Because, the once a year gathering, is more important than a specific part of that gathering, especially in regards to.
1. Family.
2. Support for his brother's condition.
Which, is all well and good because its your friends BBQ, and he can set the rules.
Anyone who's married, and is going to tell me they wouldn't be accommodating for their wife (100%) or kids (lets be honest, less than 100%...) well, happy wife, happy life.
I'm genuinely really confused by these two statements. On the one hand, you have a clear "who cares, you'd better buckle up and get over your wussy nonsense if you want to do anything in any group ever." On the other, apparently one's spouse and children deserve a guarantee of accommodation...? This is a truly bizarre contrast.
I have plenty of people in my extended family with mental health considerations, and yes that sometimes means they will skip out on a particular event because they know that its not something they can cope with, and everyone else gets on with enjoying the activity. Good luck trying to find an activity that fits 30+ at one of my family reunions and isnt going to set someone off.
You know what the people in my family with these issues hate most? Having people tie themselves in knots in an effort to be 'accommodating' thereby drawing even more attention to the issues which those people are desperate to be free from.
Ah, so obviously the best thing to do is throw a big middle finger at them and never, ever care about their issues nor ever try to lift a finger to make their lives easier. They'd better suffer in silence for the family!