What does it mean to recognize your grief triggers?

1 Answer
Sep 28, 2017

Your grief triggers are what cause you sadness / sorrow.

Explanation:

I know we all have our differences.
Some people feel sorry for the homeless, like we cared for in Mexicali, Mexico one short-term missions trip.
Some people HATE strays, and want to feed the shelter multiple times a week.
And there are those who knock their heads out when they hear the word, "Crime." There are those, too.
But that's what causes our grief triggers.
No one person on this planet can have the same grief triggers as you, see now.
Some things that make you sad aren't the same that make those around you sad.
Some things that make those sad aren't what make you sad. We all aren't the same people. We've got to recognize that.
Grief triggers are what make you you. They don't define you of course, but they make you realize that everyone has their 'this' and 'that'.
So by defining grief triggers, maybe, just maybe, we can learn to not emphasize others by their triggers, to not take it out on them because of it. Far as I know, that by means is bullying.
If you're a student, and you're still a kid, you know what I mean.
But we must learn to accept those triggers around us that we have triggers as well, so that our environment is not free of triggers, but is free of the rebellious spread of hurting triggers themselves.