Well that was obvious to me, anyway.

However,
Except that when you have heard them, and heard them repeatedly, and that’s all you hear, then the relationship is not progressing in a constructive way. Treating other people as dumping grounds has its limits in terms of efficacy, and in terms of the willingness of the one hearing the complaints to keep hearing them.
Once. Even a few times. Even many more than a few times.
However, complaints have diminishing returns. And they particularly begin to taste bad to the hearer when the source of the complaint is not even close to the hearer’s responsibility.
But if the rant precedes every encounter, and accompanies every invitation, then the ability of mortal men and women to absorb rants after rants – especially about factors or events the listener has no control over – then the quality of the relationship suffers.
I have heard several times now that the problem is a single word. And a single word written by people other than myself, over whom I have zero influence – at the time they wrote the word, and in the present tense. And further, it’s a word that even those who wrote the word had no intention of anyone internalizing to equal ‘personhood.’ (And those people were very specific about what personhood was and what personhood was not.) And somehow it’s my responsibility to apologize for an interpretation of the words of others which were never meant in the way they have been received by this person. I’m sorry, but I just don’t take responsibility for that. And for anyone to ask me, or to ask anyone else who has never been a member of the CDF, to take responsibility (listening to rant after rant) violates both justice and charity. More importantly, it doesn’t resolve the problem of the person’s “sense of welcome” if the person is attached to annoyance about an absent person’s words. It’s not rational, Coptic.
I question how well you were reading my two replies to the thread you opened on “Non-Practicing Catholics Coming Home.” You open a lot of threads. There’s nothing wrong in that, but I do sometimes wonder, given the brevity of some of your replies on those thread, how well you read the replies of others. I was very specific in my testimony. That testimony acknowledged that what most prevented my returning earlier were my own barriers to the reception which was already waiting for me in church. There was no lack of welcome. I was just not ready to receive that welcome. I was hung up on my own excuses, my own “baggage,” my own attachments to complaints –
regardless of how legitimate many of those complaints might have been. I was hung up on the past, not living in the present.
Grace and welcome are waiting for us when and whenever we want to Come Home and acknowledge our utter dependency on God, instead of shifting responsibilty for our spiritual lives onto the imperfections of human beings (especially the imperfections of others). The only perfect love exists in God Himself. When we are ready to acknowledge that, and be open to anything that might come along, really 100% of the time He comes through, both directly and through other people. Once we ask for the grace to abandon our negative expectations and to receive blessings from others, our eyes become opened in the miraculous way that Jesus opened eyes in performing miracles, and our ears become opened and are willing to hear and touch those blessings {“He who has ears to hear, let him hear.” Mt 11:15)
God provides.
That’s just a personal story but I’m sure I’ll get flamed for “lecturing,” because no matter what I say, I clearly can’t win here. And perhaps for that reason I have stopped caring about communicating. I’ve exhausted my efforts.