07-23-2014, 07:55 AM
1) When you make jokes, and things come out your mouth? You need to make sure these things that come out your mouth won't be taken by your partner as hurtful. Joke or not, that shit was hurtful, his reaction proves it hurt him.
That you hurt him is something you should be concerned about and feel bad about. Not whine over that he didn't get your joke.
2) That slap was entirely uncalled for. There are kinds of violence in a relationship that are okay. Namely? Consensual violence where -both parties- are enjoying it. (Ie: Gideon and I are both violent in bed. Prior to my home invasion, we -VERY MUCH- enjoyed the "take down" as a form of foreplay.)
Then thee is then violence that is NOT okay, no matter what. That slap? It falls in this category. Unexpected violence meant to hurt and/or demean. Non-consensual abusive behavior.
The fact is?
I consider what -both- of you did to be forms of abuse. You were emotionally/verbally abusive in your lack of sensitivity to your partner's feelings, although hopefully not intentionally so. (A good deal of humor is abusive in nature. Although socially accepted, it doesn't really make it right or okay.) He was physically abusive.
Both of you need to reflect on what you've done as well as have an open discussion (without blame but -with- apologies) on your feelings about what happened as well as your feelings for each other.
That you hurt him is something you should be concerned about and feel bad about. Not whine over that he didn't get your joke.
2) That slap was entirely uncalled for. There are kinds of violence in a relationship that are okay. Namely? Consensual violence where -both parties- are enjoying it. (Ie: Gideon and I are both violent in bed. Prior to my home invasion, we -VERY MUCH- enjoyed the "take down" as a form of foreplay.)
Then thee is then violence that is NOT okay, no matter what. That slap? It falls in this category. Unexpected violence meant to hurt and/or demean. Non-consensual abusive behavior.
The fact is?
I consider what -both- of you did to be forms of abuse. You were emotionally/verbally abusive in your lack of sensitivity to your partner's feelings, although hopefully not intentionally so. (A good deal of humor is abusive in nature. Although socially accepted, it doesn't really make it right or okay.) He was physically abusive.
Both of you need to reflect on what you've done as well as have an open discussion (without blame but -with- apologies) on your feelings about what happened as well as your feelings for each other.