Mackenzie Click-Mickelson
Chugging along the path of life
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2015
- Messages
- 30,458
I think we're just more aware that not everyone actually wanted hugs. A main example used is kids forced to hug their relatives, I even grew up under that it was just the whole "go hug your aunt and say bye, go hug your grandmother to say thanks" it wasn't really a choice but an expectation. These days we're more attuned that not all kids are comfortable with that.And a woman I have known for over 50 years, a neighbor growing up, we went to high school and college together, we even dated, felt the need to ASK before she hugged me after my mom passed. That was so odd as a hug was such a natural response. So yes, I am a hugger, but a lot less than I used to be because hugging apparently is offensive to some
It seems natural to you because you were under the society that made it so all were more or less pressured to and not doing so was a snub. Nowadays? We're just more into bodily autonomy. That isn't about a hug being offensive but about having a say in whether you want that contact or not. Speaking to a language that may be understood better it's about respecting someone and their comfort level.
That's not getting into covid and how it affected people.