Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Frequent overreacti­ons are considered red flags

- CAROLYN HAX Chat online with Carolyn at 11 a.m. each Friday at washington post.com. Write to Tell Me About It in care of The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071; or email

DEAR CAROLYN: My boyfriend and I are both avid readers and he recently finished a book by a wellknown author with a very distinct writing style. He decided to read a new book by this same author, which I have already read. When we were sitting down last Sunday to read over coffee, he pulled out his book, to which I said, “That book is wild! I think you are going to like it.”

He got upset that I ruined his chance at having an unadultera­ted first impression while reading it. I replied, “I’m sorry you feel that way, but I really didn’t mean to ruin anything, and I don’t think I did ruin anything — this author has a wild writing style.” This, in his eyes, was a non-apology, which I admitted it was, and told him I would never say anything about a book ahead of time again.

It led us to a conversati­on about how beholden the offender ought to be to apologize when they think there has been an overreacti­on. I know overreacti­on is totally in the eye of the beholder, but even my boyfriend admitted his reaction was a bit much, especially since I really didn’t mean to ruin anything for him; a lot hinges on the descriptiv­e “wild” here.

What do you think? If someone overreacts, can the original offender let them know they think that? Is that unfeeling? Or does it just totally depend on the situation? — Wild Readers DEAR READER: If anything, it’s the opposite — it totally depends on the aggregate.

When you take each situation individual­ly, there’s always a way to spin it into one person’s overreacti­on, or, from the other side, one person’s dismissive­ness of the other’s feelings. Especially when both of you think you’re right, it can be hard to tell who actually is — and in that little gap of doubt is where so many abusers or potential abusers plant seeds of self-doubt. Maybe I am being too sensitive, you start to think, or maybe I was being thoughtles­s, and bit by bit you release your grasp of your version of what’s true in favor of the other person’s.

When you take situations as a group, though, you get a remarkably clear picture of overreacti­ons and how to respond to them.

An example by way of explanatio­n: Let’s say an avid-reader friend has one overreacti­on to one generic comment on one book in one situation. In that case, the apt response forms itself. [pause, raise eyebrows] “You OK?” Because that’s what you tend to wonder when an otherwise reasonable person has utterly taken leave of his or her sense of proportion.

If instead an avid-reader friend overreacts on a fairly regular but also unpredicta­ble basis, rooted in an expectatio­n of mind-reading believed to be legitimate and justified — to the point where you find yourself trying to choose your words in advance so as to avoid triggering such overreacti­ons, and/or the ensuing accusation­s of non-apology apologies, and/or follow-up conversati­ons about ways you can be wrong in an argument even when you’re right — then it’s time to form a different, equally apt response:

Know manipulati­on when you see it, and get out as soon as you can.

 ?? Washington Post Writers Group/NICK GALIFIANAK­IS ??
Washington Post Writers Group/NICK GALIFIANAK­IS
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